HomeMy WebLinkAbout1993-2321.Kimel et al.95-07-26 DecisionEMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
Grievance Settlment Board COMMISSION DE
SEITLEMENT REGLEMENT . DESGRIEFS
ONTARIO
CROWN EMPL
0 YEES DE L'ONTARIO
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST SUITE 2100, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST; TORONTO (ON) M5G 1Z8
CROWN EMPLOYEES
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT
BOARD
BETWEEN
BEFORE :
FOR THE
GRIEVOR
FOR THE
EMPLOYER
HEARING:
TELEPHONEITELEPHONE : (416) 326- 1388
: (416) 326- 1396
GSB # 2321/93, 2322/93
CUPE
# 93-67, 93-68
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
CUPE 1750 (Kimel/Stasiulis) Grievor - and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Workers' Compensation Board)
M. Gorsky
E. Seymour
F. Collict
Employer
Vice-Chairperson
Member
Member
P. Douglas
CUPE National Representative
E. Kosmidis, P. Hillen
Counsel
Workers' Compensation Board
June 8, 1995
INTERIM DECISION
The grievance before us, G.S.B. 2321/93, dated July 5, 1993,
was filed by Sid Kimel, who has a seniority date of January, 1975.
The statement of grievance provides:
As an affected employee,
I exercised my priority placement
rights, when I applied for the posted position of Modified
Work Program Specialist, in the Toronto West Integrated
Services Unit. I was denied the job.
Article and section alleged violated:
Article 5 and any other pertinent articles of the Collective
Agreement, and C.E.C.B.A., and any other related legislation.
The settlement required was:
That I be placed in the position of Modified Work Program
Specialist, immediately.
Articles of the collective agreement relevant to this decision
are :
5.01 When a vacancy of a permanent nature occurs or a
vacancy of a temporary nature occurs and is
expected to exceed thirty calendar days (for
reasons other than vacations) or a new position is
created within the bargaining unit, the position
will be filled as follows:
(a) In accordance with Article 6 Technological and
Organizational Change, first consideration
will be given to placing employees occupying
the same or higher salary classification
within the bargaining unit who are affected by
organizational
or other changes which have
resulted, or are likely to result, in a
reduction of the workforce.
The placement of affected employees shall be
on the basis of seniority, provided the
employee has the qualifications and ability to
perform the required duties in a competent
manner or can attain them within an eight (8) month training period.
2
(b) The Employer shall make every reasonable
effort to provide suitable alternate
employment to an employee who is unable to
perform his normal duties as a consequence of
injury, illness or advancing years. Where a
suitable vacancy does not exist, the matter
shall be discussed in the Joint Committee.
(C) Subsequent to these considerations, all
vacancies shall be posted on designated
Boardwide bulletin boards for not less than
five (5) working days, except those:
(i) which have had a similar posting within
the previous three (3) months, in which
case the applicants for the previous
posting will be considered as applicants
for the current vacancy,
(ii) vacancies of a temporary nature will only
be posted in the geographic location
where they occur (Head Office: Downsview
Rehabilitation Centre; Regional Office;
Area Office) when the vacancy is a result
of absences under Articles 16 or 17. All
other vacancies will be posted under
Article 5.01. Information Offices will
be part of the office to whom they
report.
When a temporary vacancy is filled
through the posting procedure as outlined
in this article, any subsequent vacancies
resulting from the initial vacancy will
not be posted.
6.06 Retraining
(a) Where, as a result of technological and/or
organizational change, an employee’s present
position is significantly changed, requiring
new or modified skills, such employee shall be
provided with the opportunity for retraining.
The Employer will provide a period not to
exceed eight (8) months for this retraining
during which time the employee must acquire
the skills required in the changed position.
This training shall be at the expense of the
Employer, and where practical, take place
during normal working hours.
_-I_-- ____.________.
3
Where, as a result of technological and/or
organizational change, an employee’s position
becomes redundant and they are placed in a
vacant position under the terms of Article
5.01(a), if necessary, they shall be provided
with retraining. This retraining period will
not exceed eight (8) months during which time
the employee must acquire the skills of the
position. This training shall be at the
expense of the Employer, and where practical,
take place during normal working hours.
(C) At any time during the first sixty (60) days
of the eight (8) month period set out in (a)
and (b) above an employee who requests may
discontinue their position and be considered
again for placement under Article 5.01 (a).
It is understood that each employee shall only
be entitled to two (2) priority placements as
a result of a technological and/or
organizational change affecting the employee’s
position.
6.07 Transfer Arrangements
An employee affected by technological and/or
organizational change who declines retraining when
their job is significantly changed, who is unable
to acquire the required skills through retraining
or whose job is made redundant, shall be given
priority consideration for vacant positions under
Article 5.01 (a) .
This applies to any vacancy in the province. The
costs of relocation shall be paid by the employer
if there is no alternative position at the current
or equivalent salary grade in the same Division,
Branch or Regional or Area office or Information
Service Office as the case may be.
6.08 Income Protection
Where an employee is placed under Article 5.01(a)
or Article 6.10 into a position with a lower salary
grade than his/her former permanent position, and
the employee’s current salary is higher than the
maximum salary of the lower salary grade, the
employee will maintain his/her salary level, with
regular salary increments for a period of two years
following which the employee will receive 50% of
future pertinent general salary increases or will
4
be paid at the maximum of the lower salary grade,
whichever is higher.
This Interim Decision deals with a preliminary issue that
arose at the hearing as to whether Mr. Kimel, who it was agreed was
an affected employee under art. 6.05, and who was entitled to
"first consideration" to be placed in a position under the
provisions of art. 5.01(a) on the basis of seniority, was, as the
Union conteded, automatically entitled to the eight month training
period provided for in the latter article, if he lacked the
immediate qualifications and ability to perform the required
duties of the position, or, as the Employer contended, it has, at
the time of considering who is to be placed in the vacancy, the
discretion to assess whether the employee entitled to "first
consideration "can attain" the requisite qualif ications and
ability to perform the required duties of the position "in a
competent manner" "within an eight (8) month training period, and,
if it concludes that he or she cannot do so within that period,
decline to place him or her in the position.
In this case the Employer, consistent with its interpretation
of art. 5.01(a), denied Mr. Kimel the opportunity to receive
training for the position of Modified Work Specialist, because it
concluded that he could not be trained so that he could attain the
requisite qualifications and ability "within an eight (8) month
training period.
5
The position of the Union was that art. 6.06 (b) governs the
placement of Mr. Kimel, and that the first sentence of that article
refers to art. 5.01(a) only for the purpose of giving management
the discretion to decide whether the employee being considered for
appointment to the position had the qualifications and ability to
immediately perform its required duties: that is, that training was
unnecessary because the employee was already qualified to perform
it without training. Where it decides that this is not the case,
then it was submitted that there was a mandatory duty created by
art. 6.06(b) to furnish an affected employee with retraining for up
to eight months to see whether he or she could aquire the "skills
required to perform the duties of the position" within the eight
month period. The Employer was said to "have specifically given up
any assessment rights" by agreeing to the language of art. 6.06 (b) .
In further support of its interpretation, the Union referred
to the provisions of art. 6.07, and emphasized the words "who is
unable to acquire the required skills through retraining." It was
submitted that the emphasized words indicate that the parties had
anticipated that an employee afforded a retraining opportunity
under art. 6.06 (b) might be unsuccessful in achieving an acceptable
level of competency and have "set out what happens in that event."
The submission was repeated in the Union's written reply.
In further support of its position (in its original and reply
submissions), the Union relied upon art. 6.06 (c) , where an employee
6
given a retraining period of up to eight months (in arts. 6.06(a)
and (b)) has "the right" to leave the new position and return to
the affected list,
"at the employee's option only. We were asked
to compare the operation of art. 6.06(c) with art. 5.06 of the
collective agreement ("Trial Period:
5.06 Trial Period
The successful applicant will be placed in a new position
and will be considered to be on trial" for a period of
sixty (60) working days. If, during that time, in the
opinion of the Employer, the employee is unsatisfactory,
or if the employee so requests, he shall be returned to
his former salary classification and placed in a position
for which he is qualified without loss of seniority.
The Union noted that the latter article sets out the more
standard" election of either the employee or the Employer to vacate
the new position. Art. 5.06 deals with the trial period afforded
a successful candidate after job posting. The Union referred to
the difference between an employee's option in art. 6.06 (c) and the
options of the Employer and the employee in art. 5.06 as supporting
its contention that the regime of Article 6 is to give the benefit
of doubt to the senior employee and afford them [sic] the best
possible opportunity to secure the highest possible paying
position.
The provisions of art. 6.08 of the collective agreement were
also relied upon by the Union as supporting its position because:
The affected employee knows that his/her salary will
be protected up to a period of two years after which
he/she will receive one-half of any general salary
increases until the grid catches up to their protected
7
rate. It is then clearly in their economic interest to
secure the highest possible position if their current
position is declared redundant.
It was also submitted on behalf of the Union that article 5
is essentially designed for the situation of promotion" where the
"Employer has retained the right to examine candidates in a
relative ability competition ( [art. ] 5.05) “ which type of clause
afforded a wider discretion than a threshold' type of
promotion clause." Mr. Douglas, for the Union again emphasized the
Employer's specifically granted right in a promotion case (art.
5.06) to "return a successful candidate to [his] former position
during the trial period in the new position." Article 6, in
contrast, was said to establish a threshold test where an affected
employee able to perform the duties and responsibilities of the
position must be placed in it. Affected employees who do not meet
the threshold test were said to have an absolute right to receive
up to eight months training, and, concomitantly, the Employer is
mandated to furnish such training and has no discretion to refuse
it on the basis of its opinion that the employee will be unable to
achieve an acceptable level of competency within the designated
period. The discretion with respect to receiving training was said
to rest entirely with the affected employee who could accept or
reject it.
The distinction drawn by the Union was said to be supported by
sound policy reason":
8
The affected employee is not moving up" as in a
promotion. They are using their seniority to lay claim
to an equal or lower position. From the employee's
perspective, they are interested in securing the highest
possible position for economic reasons (6.08). From the
perspective of the Employer, it is useful to employ the
skills of the redundant employee at the highest possible
level
- rather than be left with an
workforce.
The Employer maintained that it had the right to assess if an
affected employee had the requisite qualifications and ability to
perform the required duties in a competent manner prior to
placement.
The Employer relied on the "plain wording" of art 5.01(a) in
support of its position and referred to the word provided in the
second paragraph of art. 5.01(a) and to the dictionary definition
of that word.
Provide is defined as to make a proviso or
stipulation ... to have as a condition: STIPULATE ...”
(Webster's Dictionary). The use of the term provided
signifies that the placement of the employee is intended
to be contingent on or subject to the factors which
follow that term.
Consequently, the placement of an employee can only be
made after the Employer has considered whether either of
the two subsequent conditions has been met. The Employer
must first consider whether the employee has the
qualifications and ability to perform the required duties
in a competent manner. If so, then the Employer is
obliged to place that employee in the position.
If the employee lacks the qualifications and ability, the
Employer must then consider whether there is a reasonable
likelihood that the employee can attain them within the
training period. If the Employer determines that the
employee cannot attain those skills during that period,
there is no obligation on the Employer to place the
employee.
9
It is critical to note that the Employer's obligation is
only to give "first consideration to the affected
employee. Consideration means "continuous and careful
thought (Webster's Dictionary). The use of this term
cannot reasonably be construed to be mandatory in nature.
"First consideration means solely that the affected
employee is to be considered for the position within the
meaning of Article 5.01 and prior to other employees. It
confers no other entitlement.
This view is also buttressed by the fact, for example,
that Article 5.01(c) states that subsequent to these
considerations, all vacancies shall be posted on
designated Boardwide bulletin boards...". It is clearly
anticipated under the terms of the WCB/CUPE Collective
Agreement that there may not be any affected employees
who can fill the vacancy within the meaning of Article
5.01 (a). To arrive at a different conclusion would
render Article 5.01(c) meaningless, a construction which
the Article cannot reasonably bear.
In this respect, the clear intention of the WCB/CUPE
Collective Agreement is to set up a hierarchy of posting,
starting with the affected employee and ending with the
general posting to all employees. There is no automatic
entitlement to a position at any point along that
hierarchy.
Counsel for the Employer also argued that Article 5.01(a), as
written, focuses on a point in time being that of the vacancy and
"it establishes a consideration process to be followed at that
time. (emphasis in Employer's submission) . The process, being so
focused, was said not to envisage:
. . . a process, stretching over potentially several years,
during which a series of affected employees have eight
months in which to show they can attain the
qualifications and abilities to perform the required
duties.
To argue automatic entitlement to training would possibly
lead to a situation where a vacancy could not be filled
for well over a year. To provide an example of this
absurd result, assume that there are five affected
employees, each of whom is given an opportunity to train
for the job and each of whom is unsuccessful. This would
result in a prolongation of the posting period for
up to
10
40 months (5 employees x 8 months)
could move to the next step of the
the vacancy. This interpretation
supported by either the wording of
section as a whole.
before the Employer
hierarchy in filling
is one which is not
the provision or the
If the WCB/CUPE Collective Agreement had intended that
the training period be automatically provided to the
affected employee, it would have contained an express
provision to that effect. For example, it would have
stated that the affected employee "must be provided" with
an eight (8) month training period. Alternatively, it
would have stated that the employee has attained"
competency rather than can attain" competency.
In addition, it can be argued that Article 6.06(b) does
not anticipate that training will even be provided until
the steps contemplated in Article 5.01 (a) have been
exhausted and an employee is placed thereunder. This is
clear evidence of the intention that training is to be
provided only after the Employer considers the steps set
out in Article 5.01(a) and makes a determination
regarding placement.
Counsel for the Employer referred to a number of cases in
support of its submissions.
Re Phillips Cables Ltd. and International Union of
Electrical. Radio & Machine Workers, Local 525 (1977) 16
L.A.C. (2d) 345 (Adams, Philips, Knopf-dissenting)
provides a thorough review of the cases on this issue.
The Arbitration Board considered the grievor's argument
that he was senior to the successful candidate in a job
vacancy and thus should have received the job. The
relevant provisions of the collective agreement are set
out below:
Article 25.02
The vacancy shall be filled from among such
applicants for which the vacancy is a promotion, on
the basis of their seniority subject to their
capability to perform the work under the provisions
of paragraph 25.04.
Article 25.04
Employees so promoted shall be given twenty (20)
consecutive working days for training purposes, at
the end of which time the supervisor concerned will
11
decide whether or not employee is to be retained in
the new position ....
The union argued that management could assess whether the
employee is capable of performing the work only upon
completion of the training period. Alternatively, if the
company could assess the capability of an employee before
providing him with a training period, "it should be able
to refuse the training period to the senior employee only
if his or her application, even with the benefit of a
training period, is patently preposterous or an attempt
to put a "square peg in a round hole (page 349).
The employer argued that the collective agreement
required it to assess the employee twice. The first time
was when the application was received, with a view to
determining whether the candidate would be capable of
learning the job within 20 days. If the employer
concluded that the employer [sic] could learn the job,
the second time would be at the conclusion of the
training period.
The Board found that Article 25.04 was not operative
until an employee had been promoted within the meaning of
Article 25.03.
It stated that "if it is thought that the
most senior applicant can perform the work or will be
able to perform the work after having received the
benefit of the training program he or she [is] to be
promoted" (page 350). This meant that the company:
... must, in cases where a training programme is
necessary, assess an employee's entitlement to a
job at two junctures. First, when the application
is made initially it must assess whether the
employee has the capability of performing the job,
understanding that he or she is entitled to a 20-
day training programme. In other words, the
company must ask itself whether the employee will
be capable of performing the job after having had
the benefit of a training programme ... Should the
company conclude that the employee will be able to
perform the job after having had the benefit of the
training programme the second point of assessment
arises at the completion of the programme when the
supervisor is to decide whether or not the employee
is to be retained (page 351). . . .
... quite obviously the trade union's
interpretation results in a cumbersome process and
is potentially a very costly one. . . . It takes very
little imagination to visualize situations where a
number of the most senior applicants are obviously
12
incapable of learning the job within the stipulated
training period and yet the proposed interpretation
would require the company to expend the time and
shoulder the costs of a series of fruitless
training programmes. And all this to the prejudice
of other applicants who must await the passing of a
futile exercise. In my opinion, such a result
should only flow from the most explicit language . . . Indeed if the meaning of para 25.03 were as the
union contends it should simply have provided that
the senior applicant for any job would be trained
for it (pages 352-3)
The wording in the collective agreement in Phillips Cable
lends itself far more readily to an argument that the
training must be automatically provided than does the
wording in the WCB/CUPE Collective Agreement.
Nonetheless, the Board vigorously rejected the argument
that the employee is automatically entitled to a training
period. It concluded that the employer was entitled to
assess whether the employee would benefit from that
training period prior to placement in that training
period.
The Board in Phillips Cable also found that the length of
a trial/training period may be a factor in interpreting
entitlement to the period. It referred to a case in
which a 3 day training period was given to an employee
and commented:
. . . the disruption of an unfettered employee’s
access to [the training period] would not be as
great. For this reason, it is not as easy to
conclude that an unfettered senior employee’s
entitlement is an unlikely result of the parties’
intent and thus an arbitrator could be justified in
not demanding as explicit language as I have in
this case. (page 361)
In the WCB/CUPE Collective Agreement, the training period
is eight (8) months, which is a significantly longer
period than that considered even in Phillips Cable. On
the basis of the duration of the training period alone,
only unequivocal, unambiguous language could lead to the
conclusion that the training was intended to be provided
automatically. Article 5.01 does not contain such
express language and thus cannot be construed as
providing automatic entitlement to that training period.
Further, from pp. 8-9 of the Employer’s submissions:
13
In Re Andres (B.C. ) Ltd. and United Brewer Workers, Local
300 (1984), 14 L.A.C. (3d) 238, the Arbitration Board
considered a competition where the successful candidate
had less seniority than the grievor. The collective
agreement provided that vacancies or new positions shall
be filled by the applicant who has the most seniority,
providing he shows willingness and incentive and is
capable of doing the workf (Article 3.11). Article 3.12
provided that the selected applicant was to be provided
with a 30 day trial period to prove his suitability. The
union argued that if the grievor met the threshold
requirements of the position, he should be given the 30
day training period. The Panel found that:
... in the absence of express words, where a
collective agreement qualifies a senior employee's
entry into a trial/training programme by reference
to skill, ability, capability or qualifications, he
will be entitled to it only where on the evidence
it is reasonably likely that he will be able to
become fully functional in the job within the time
provided. (page 249)
The majority of the panel concluded that the grievor was
not entitled to a trial period under Article 3.12 since
it was convinced that on the evidence it was not
reasonably likely that he would become fully competent
during that time. As in Phillips Cable, the wording in
Andres Wines lends itself far more readily to an argument
that the training must be automatically provided than
does the WCB/CUPE Collective Agreement. Nonetheless, the
Panel clearly indicated that the only reasonable
interpretation of the collective agreement was that the
employer is to assess the employee prior to placement in
the training program.
The Board agrees with the statement at p. 245 of Andres:
Although the jurisprudence on this subject appears
to be confused and complex, in fact it is not wholly
irreconcilable. In fact, the board in Phillips Cables
did an admirable job in that respect if not by weaving a
consistent thread, at least by distinguishing them.
In Andres, after reviewing the jurisprudence, the board
summarized their conclusions, at p. 249:
To summarize then, what Phillips Cables did was to
recognize that it is entirely possible for parties to a
14
collective agreement to expressly provide for mandatory
trial/training periods to senior employee without more.
However, in the absence of express words, where a
collective agreement qualifies a senior employee’s entry
into a trial/training programme by reference to skill,
ability, capability or qualifications, he will be
entitled to it only where on the evidence it is
reasonably likely that he will be able to become fully
functional in the job within the time provided. It
rejected that the decision is to be made by the employee.
In effect, it decided that the jurisdiction of an
arbitration board in that respect is not limited to a
determination of whether the subjective assessment of the
employee is bona fide held but followed the Great
Atlantic line of authority that no such limitations
should be implied [Re Great Atlantic & Pacific Co. of
Canada Ltd. and Canadian Food & Allied Workers, Local 175
(1976) , 13 L.A.C. (2d) 211n, 76 C.L.L.C. para. 14,056;
affd L.A.C. loc. cit.] A collective agreement is to be
enforced according to its terms.
In that context, the distinction urged by counsel
for the union in this case is immaterial. The rule is
that where a trial or training period is required to be
given to the most senior applicant subject to ability or
capability, he is to be given that trial or training if
there is a reasonable likelihood that he could become
fully functional within the time provided. Even where
the word capalbe is used it will not be sufficient to
demonstrate mere aptitude but that the employee will in
all probability qualify during the trial/training period.
Any other conclusion would have the effect of extending
the period.
The more recent consensus found in the jurisprudence is also
summarized in Brown and Beatty, Canadian Labour Arbitration. 3rd
ed. para. 6:3230:
Even when a provision in a collective agreement
specifically provides for some training or a trial
period, it has usually been thought that this is not an
unqualified right. ... More generally, where it could be
established that an employee was incapable of performing
the tasks associated with the position claimed, viz.,
that she did not possess the capability for doing it even
after a period of ... training, arbitrators have
confirmed management’s prerogative to deny her the benefits of those training . . . periods. In those
circumstances, and depending upon the language used,
where the agreement provides for such training or trial
15
periods, arbitrators have usually required the employer
to make an evaluation of the applicant's qualifications
both before and after the trial or training periods..
.
.
It is significant that Brown and Beatty do not differentiate
between cases where a trial or a training period is provided. That
is, there is no special significance to be attributed to the
training period being associated with a competition case or with a
case such as the one before us.
If the parties intended to impose a mandatory duty on the
Employer to give the senior affected employee a training period of
up to eight months to attain the necessary qualifications and
ability to perform the required duties of the position in a
competent manner, they had to express their purpose in clear
language. A collective agreement is entered into in the context of
an existing body of jurisprudence. For a party to overcome an
arbitral consensus it must see to it that appropriate, clear
language is agreed to.
The reference made on behalf of the Union to art. 6.07 does
not affect the application of the general rule. All it says (in
that portion relevant to this case) is that where an affected
employee is unable to acquire the skills through retraining,"
which in the circumstances there described must mean within the
eight month period, he or she is to be given priority consideration
for other vacant positions under article 5.01 (a) . Article 6, 07
I__....._ .I
16
says nothing about when the assessment is to be made, so as to
indicate a departure from the usual rule.
Nor does the reference made on behalf of the Union to art.
6.06(c) alter the usual rule, as it does not state that the
affected employee has a mandatory right to retraining. It only
gives the employee an earlier opportunity to discontinue the
retraining period once the period has commenced. Consistent with
the rule, the Employer, once it has considered the relevant facts
and afforded the retraining opportunity to the affected employee,
must give that employee the entire period of eight months
retraining to achieve competence within the meaning of the second
paragrph of art. 5.01(a) paragraph.
Although there is an economic interest under art. 6.08 for an
affected employee to secure the highest possible position if his
current position is declared redundant, this does not amount to a
clear indication that such employee has an right to request and be
granted up to eight months retraining, with the assessment of
competency to take place only after retraining.
We cannot agree with the submission of the Union that the
because we are dealing with a threshold of competency case the
Employer has accepted the obligation to afford affected employees
the retraining opportunity provided for in art. 5.01(a). We have
17
already dealt with argument made as to the effect of art. 6.06(c)
in this regard.
Although we agree with Mr. Douglas' submission that it is,
from the Employer's perspective, useful to employ the skills of
the redundant employee at the highest level
- rather than be left
with an underemployed' workforce, this cannot alter the
application of the usual rule when the language of the collective
agreement does not support the Union's position. Furthermore, it
can be argued that it is also important to the Employer that it
should not have to assume the expense and innef iciency of affording
eight months training to a redundant employee where the evidence
indicates that he or she will not be able to aquire the
qualifications and ability to perform the duties of the position in
a competent manner with up to eight months training.
In the Union's written submissions (original and reply)
emphasis was placed on the fact that we are not dealing with a
promotion competition, and that art. 6.06 (b) provides for
retraining and not training and that the operative clause for
the grievor is 6.06(b)I1 (see reply submissions of Union, at p.1).
We cannot agree with the Union's reply submission (at p. 4) that
art. 6.06 (b) provides for "mandatory retraining if necessary, if
there exists a vacancy identified throush [art. ] 5.01 (a) .
(Emphasis in the Union's reply submissions.) Art. 6.06(b) is
explicit in stating when it only operates: when the affected
18
employee is "placed in a vacant position under the terms of Article
5.01(a) .” Article 5.01(a) and not art. 6.06(b) governs the
circumstances in which an affected employee becomes entitled to a
training opportunity of up to eight months. It refers to first
consideration being given to affected employees for placement
in
the position, and placement is not stated in imperative language so
that the right to be placed in the position with up to eight months
training is automatic once seniority is established.
Because of our conclusion, the retraining referred to in
art. 6.06 (b) can only mean the same thing as the training period
referred to in art. 5.01(a). (We also note that art. 6.06(b) not
only refers to retraining" but in its last sentence uses the word
"training. Article 6.06 (b) does not say under what circumstances
an affected employee will be given retraining, but specifically
states that the placement of the employee will be under the
provisions of art. 5.01(a). Rather than being the operative
provision that determines the circumstances under which an affected
employee will receive a training opportunity, art. 6.06(b) has the
function of explaining, in slightly greater detail than art
5.01(a), that an employee placed in the position on a retraining
basis, has up to eight months to "acquire the skills required to
perform the duties of the position. It also indicates who pays for
the training, and when it is expected to be conducted.
19
For all of the above reasons we have concluded that affected
employees do not have an automatic right to the training period
provided for in art. 5.01 (a), which, as art. 6.06(b) makes clear,
is the article that governs whether such employees will be placed
in a vacant position.
If clear language had been employed giving affected employees
an automatic right to the eight month period of training/retraining
if they did not have the present qualifications and ability to
perform the required duties, it would not matter that the
consequences of such an interpretation led to a situation that the
parties would not likely have intended. There are many reasons why
parties to a collective agreement agree to certain articles:
bargaining power; willingness to acceed to a demand in one area in
order to achieve benefits in another, and arbitrators should not
lightly interfere with the clear language in their agreement. In
Andres, at p. 213, reference was made to the argument of counsel
for the Union that the Phillips case ought not to:
be accepted as authoritative on this point since the
decision in that case was based upon consequences rather
than rights. The arbitration board in that case found
that it was unlikely that the parties would have intended
a prolix appointment procedure involving the rotation of
senior candidates through a succession of trial/training
periods. She said the board ought to have concentrated
on what the collective agreement actually provided.
Under this agreement, if the grievor meets the threshold
requirements of the position, he should be given the 30-
day trial period: Re Inglis Ltd. and U.S.W., Local 4487
(1977) 15 L.A.C. (2d) 227 (O’Shea)
Where the language
plausible interpretations
surrounding circumstances
20
of an agreement is unclear and two
are before a board, it can consider the
that would be known to the parties when
they negotiated the provision(s) to be interpreted. In this case,
as in Phillips, at p.352:
Quite obviously the trade union's interpretation
results in a cumbersome process and is potentially a very
costly one. Moreover, as I have said, the submission
that only a latent faculty need exist at the end of the
20-day training period goes against the fact that the
parties have specifically limited the training period to
20 days. It takes very little imagination to visualize
situations where a number of the most senior applicants
are obviously incapable of learning the job within the
stipulated training period and yet the proposed
interpretation would require the company to expend the
time and shoulder the costs of a series of fruitless
training programmes. And all this to the prejudice of
other applicants who must await the passing of a futile
exercise. In my opinion such a result should only flow
from the most explicit language.
Although we have ruled that there is no mandatory obligation
on the Employer to afford the up to eight month training/retraining
opportunity sought by the Grievor, we still have to deal with the
issue of whether the Employer properly carried out its obligations
under the collective agreement when it decided that Mr. Kimel would
be unable to attain the qualifications and ability to perform the
required duties of the Modified Work Program Specialist in a
competent manner within an eight (8) month training period" as
provided for in art. 5.01 (a). Al though we find that the Emp 1 oyer
does not have an unfettered discretion to deny training to an
affected employee, we cannot accept the Union's suggestion that
the Employer has a mandatory obligation to provide up to eight
21
months training/retraining to the senior affected employee who
requests it.
We emphasize that we are not dealing with an either
(complete and unfettered discretion) or (mandatory duty)
situation. The Employer has discretion, but it is not unfettered.
It must be exercised taking into consideration all relevant
information that is reasonably available to it concerning whether
the affected employee has the qualifications and ability to
immediately perform the required duties of the position in a
competent manner, and if not, whether he
or she can attain them
within an eight month training period. It must not consider
irrelevant evidence, and if it does, it must be clear that such
consideration did not influenced its decision. It must act in good
faith, and its decision must be one that could have been reasonably
arrived at by an employer relying on the relevant evidence before
it. There is no reason for the Employer to be put to a greater or
lesser test.
We wish to thank all counsel for their carefully prepared and
thoughtfuly presented submissions, which were extremely helpful to
us.
Dated at Toronto this 26th day of July, 1995.
M. Gorsky - Vice Chairperson
“I Dissent" (dissent attached)
Ed Seymour - Member
22
G.S.B. File 2321/93 CUPE Local 1750
(Kimel Stasiulis)
- and -
THE CROWN IN RIGHT OF ONTARIO
(WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD)
DISSENT
Edward E. Seymour
I have read the Majority Award on this preliminary issue and, with
respect, I must dissent.
In the Award, the Majority (at page 15) state:
"If the parlies intended to impose a mandatory duty on the
Employer
to give the senior affected employee a training period
of up to eight months to attain the necessary qualifications and
ability to perform the required duties of the position in a
competent manner, they had to express their purpose in clear
language. “
It is difficult to imagine how the language could be made clearer. the
first paragraph of Article 5.01 (a) reads:
"In accordance with Article 6 Technological and Organizational
Change, first consideration will be given to placing employees
occupying the
same or higher salary classification within the
bargaining unit who are affected by organizational or other
changes which have resulted
or likely to result in a reduction of
the workforce. “
There is no qualifying language in this paragraph. First consideration
"will be given", not "may be given." The second paragraph of Article 5.01
(a) is equally clear:
Page 2
"The placement of affected employees shall be on the basis of
seniority, provided the employee has the qualifications and
ability to perform the required duties in a competent manner or
can attain them within an eight (8) month training period. “
The employee will be placed if he/she can do the job or can obtain the
qualifications within an eight (8) month training period.
The Employer, in its own submission, agreed that if the employee can
do the job , he/she would be placed in the position immediately.
At page 4 of its submission, the Employer correctly I contend, states:
"The Employer must first consider whether the employee has the
qualifications and ability to perform the required duties in a
competent manner. If so, then the Employer is obligated to place
that employee in the position. “
In the absence of any language to the contrary, the same obligation
extends to the Employer's requirement to provide training to an affected
employee who cannot perform the job immediately.
I am in agreement with the Union's argument at page 2, which states:
"There is no room for the "employee's discretion" with these
mandatory requirements. "
I am also in agreement with the Union's position stated on Page 5:
"The Employer has retained their right to examine candidate in
a relative ability competition (5.05) and with the type of clause
their discretion is wider than with a "threshold" type of promo-
tion clause. Further, the Employer, in the case of a promotion,
retains the right to return a successful candidate to their former
position during the trial period in the new position (5.06).
"The Employers' and employee's rights are distinctly different in
Article 6. When it comes to an employee whose position has been
declared redundant, if that employee is immediately capable of
Page 3
performing the requirements of a position that becomes vacant
they are placed in that position (5.01 (a) ) . There is no "relative
ability" competition in this circumstance - it is a clear case of
establishing threshold competence. If, on the other hand, the
redundant employee cannot perform the vacant position immedia-
tely, the Employer has accepted the obligation to train them for
up to eight months. There is no discretion accorded the
Employer, during the training, to remove the employee (6.06
(c) ) . That election is solely up to the employee. “
There is no language anywhere in Article 5.01 which places a lesser
obligation to provide training to an affected employee without the competency
at the outset than there is to place an affected employee with the competency
in the job immediately.
The first paragraph in 5.01 (c) gives first consideration to the affected
employee; the second paragraph (1) places the employee in the position if
he/she can do the job immediately; and (2) provides for training if he/she can
do the job within eight (8) months.
These two obligations are not only contained in the same Article, but in
the same paragraph, and should be complied with before Article 5.01 (e),
which addresses "posting vacancies" can be applied.
For these reasons, I would have ruled that the Employer's obligation to
provide re-training in the circumstances of this case is a mandatory
requirement. :
Edward E. Seymour, Union Nominee
opeiu:343
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