HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-0202.Hollingsworth et al.13-02-01 Decision
Crown 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#2010-0202, 2010-0207, 2010-0211, 2010-1179, 2010-2203, 2010-2550, 2010-2551
UNION#2010-0212-0009, 2009-0633-0011, 2010-0526-0005, 2009-0317-0008, 2010-0526-0053,
2010-0526-0054, 2010-0551-0055
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Hollingsworth et al) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Attorney General) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Tim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER Omar Shahab
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING January 22, 2013.
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Decision
[1] The Board is seized with a policy grievance and a number of individual grievances
which have been consolidated on agreement. The allegation common to all of the
grievances is to the effect that the employer has refused and continues to refuse to
apply the collective agreement to bargaining unit work performed by the grievors.
[
2] The grievors are employed as Court Reporters. The ministry employs some 700 court
reporters across Ontario. The court reporter position includes two primary functions,
that of taking the record during court proceedings, and the preparation and
certification of transcripts from that record upon request by judges or legal counsel.
The grievances are about the alleged refusal by the employer to apply the collective
agreement to the work related to the preparation and certification of transcripts, a
substantial amount of which is performed by court reporters outside of regular work
hours.
[3] When these matters came before me, the union sought interim relief pursuant to s.
48(12)(i) of the Labour Relations Act as incorporated by s. 7(1) of the Crown
Employees Collective Bargaining Act.
[4] The policy grievance before me alleges that “The employer is in violation of article 1 of
the OPS collective agreement and any other articles and legislation by not applying the
terms of the collective agreement to court reporters who prepare and certify transcripts”.
Remedies sought include a cease and desist order and an order that the employer apply
the terms and conditions of the collective agreement.
[5] The interim relief sought is for an order directing that the employer apply the terms of the
collective agreement to all court reporters performing the work of preparation and
certification of transcripts.
[6] This issue between the parties has a history before the Board. A brief review of that
history is essential to put the present dispute into context. In a decision dated July 27,
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2006 in Re Hunt et al, 2001-0534; 2003-2944(Abramsky) (“2006 decision”), the
Board dealt with the very same dispute. The respective positions advanced by the
parties is capsulized at p. 9 of the decision as follows:
A very significant amount of typing transcripts, however, is done outside of
court, on non-work time, and this forms the crux of the Union’s complaint. In
the Union’s view, transcript preparation is required work which should be subject
to the collective agreement, including the overtime provisions. In the Ministry’s
view, the preparation of transcripts is separate from the taking of the record and
when Court Reporters perform this function, they are acting as independent
contractors. In the Ministry’s view, the preparation of transcripts is not
bargaining unit work.
[7] Reviewing the facts before her and the applicable law, Vice-Chair Abramsky in a well-
reasoned decision concluded as follows at p. 53:
I determine that the preparation and certification of transcripts is bargaining unit
work of the Court Reporters, and so declare.
I wish to emphasize that, at this point, I am only deciding whether the preparation
and certification of transcripts is bargaining unit work. All issues regarding the
implications of this finding are referred back to the parties, and I will remain
seized.
[8] In a subsequent decision dated December 4, 2009, in the same matter, Vice-Chair
Abramsky clarified the implications of her 2006 decision as follows at paras:21-22:
[21] After many days of hearing regarding how transcription services were
performed in the province of Ontario and the control (or lack of control) that
the Employer exercises, the board accepted the Union’s position that
transcription work was the work of the Court Reporters as employees, not as
independent contractors, as the Employer had asserted. The determination
was as follows:
I determine that the preparation and certification of transcripts is bargaining
unit work of the Court Reporters, and so declare.
[22] What this means - as requested in the policy grievance - is that the
preparation and certification of transcripts is work of the bargaining unit,
specifically the Court Reporters, to which the collective agreement applies.
It also means that OPSEU is the exclusive representative of the Court
Reporters for that work. The decision had implications retrospectively – the
Court Reporters and the Union were entitled to all the benefits of the
collective agreement. It also had prospective implications – the Employer
could not refuse to recognize OPSEU as the exclusive representative, nor
could it treat the Court Reporters as falling out side of the collective
agreement in regard to transcription work. The decision was based on the
evidence and facts established at the hearing.
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[9] Employer counsel conceded that “the status quo” that existed at the time of the 2006
decision has not changed to date. That is, court reporters continue to prepare and certify
transcripts in the same manner as they did at the time. Counsel therefore conceded that
“liability is not in issue” in the grievances before me, and that the dispute will be only
about remedy. In other words, the employer conceded that it has been, and continues to
be, in violation by not applying the collective agreement to the work in question.
[10] It is readily apparent that the interim relief sought by the union is identical to the remedy
sought in its policy grievance itself. In response to the union’s notice of application for
interim relief, in a letter dated December 28, 2012, employer counsel wrote as follows:
Please note that after the Union’s interim relief application is decided, the Employer
will bring preliminary motions at the next scheduled hearing date asking the Vice-
Chair to dismiss Union Policy Grievance 2011-0999-0033. The Employer will make
the following submissions:
a. The remedy requested in that grievance (that the Employer apply the
Collective Agreement to all Court Reporters) is beyond the jurisdiction of the
GSB.
b. Even if the GSB had jurisdiction to order the remedy, the grievance does not
make out a prima facie case for that remedy based on the particulars
provided.
c. Vice-Chair Abramsky issued a ruling on whether the Employer could be
ordered to apply the Collective Agreement to Court Reporters on December
4, 2009. Issue estoppel applies based on that ruling.
d. The union is legally barred from seeking an order that Employer apply the
Collective Agreement to Court Reporters. The Union failed to seek that
remedy as part of the original Hunt et al proceeding. The Union is
attempting to impermissibly relitigate the Hunt et al grievance to attempt to
obtain a remedy which it chose not pursue originally.
[11] These motions are scheduled for hearing before me on February 21, 2013.
[12] “Interim” relief typically is granted pending the determination of the merits of a
grievance. It is for that reason, an applicant for interim relief is required to show, inter
alia, that it has an arguable case on merits. In the present case there is no determination
pending on the merits. The employer has conceded the merits and agreed that liability is
not being contested. The only determination to be made is about remedy.
[13] The employer has taken the position that the Board lacks jurisdiction to order the remedy
requested in the policy grievance under consideration, namely an order that the employer
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apply the collective agreement to the disputed work. In the circumstances, to grant that
very remedial order by way of interim relief, in the Board’s view, would be in effect to
issue a cease and desist order. It would not be an “interim” order because there is no
determination pending on the merits, which would either end that relief or make it a final
Board order.
[14] Following the hearing on February 21, 2013, the Board would make one of two
conclusions on remedy. It may agree with the employer that it has no jurisdiction to
order the employer to apply the collective agreement. It seems that in that eventuality the
union would be entitled a declaration and to seek redress with respect to losses that result
from the employer’s continuing failure to apply the collective agreement to the
bargaining unit work in question. It is to be noted that the employer’s position is that no
losses flow to the grievors or the union from its violation.
[15] On the other hand, if the Board concludes that it has jurisdiction to order the remedy
requested, it is open for the union to seek an order, (not an interim order) that the
collective agreement be applied to court reporters performing the work in question, as it
has done in the grievance itself. Such an order would be enforceable. Once complied
with, the violation and the accrual of losses if any, would cease. The parties would then
be able to focus on past losses. That is, losses that may have been suffered up to the date
when the violation ends by the employer applying the collective agreement.
[16] Considering the foregoing, and particularly considering that the union’s entitlement to the
full remedy it seeks in the policy grievance would be determined fully and finally within
a few weeks, the Board does not consider it appropriate to issue interim relief.
[17] For all of the foregoing reasons, the application for interim relief is denied.
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[18] This proceeding will continue as scheduled and the Board remains seized.
Dated at Toronto this 1st day of February 2013.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice-Chair