HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011-1335.Union.13-02-26 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2011-1335
UNION#2011-0999-0033
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Union) Union
- and -
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 February 21, 2013.
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Decision
[1] The Board is seized with a number of individual grievances and a policy grievance which
were consolidated on agreement. The focus of this decision, however, is only on the
policy grievance, GSB file number 2011-1335. This policy grievance dated June 29,
2011 states, “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. The employer objects to the union’s request for
those orders.
[2] The issue of whether or not the work of production of transcripts performed by Court
Reporters is covered by the collective agreement has a history of litigation before this
Board. That history was reviewed in my decision in this matter dated February 1, 2013
and need not be repeated here. It suffices to record that as a result of the previous Board
decisions, the following facts are not in dispute considering the agreement by the
employer that nothing has changed in the manner the work of producing transcripts is
carried out, and that the “Status quo continues”:
- The work in question continues to be bargaining unit work.
- The collective agreement continues to apply to that work.
- When court reporters perform that work they do so as employees, and not as
independent contractors.
- Finally, by not applying the collective agreement to employees performing that work,
and continuing to treat them as independent contractors, the employer continues to be in
contravention of the collective agreement. As employer counsel put it, “liability is not in
issue”. The only dispute is about the remedy that would flow as a result of the
contravention.
[3] The Board’s ruling that the work in question was bargaining unit work was first made
in its July 2006 decision in Re Hunt. In a later decision dated December 4, 2009, at
para. 22, the Board made clear what its July 2006 decision means, as follows:
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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.
[4] The employer has made it known to the union as well as the Board that its intention is to
exercise its management rights to contract out the work of producing transcripts. It takes
the position that when this is done, the collective agreement would no longer apply to that
work. The evidence is that notwithstanding the Board’s finding that under the status quo
(which continues to date) the work is bargaining unit work to which the collective
agreement applies, the employer has explicitly stated that it has no intention of applying
the collective agreement to that work in the interim period leading up to the
implementation of its planned contract out. Thus, in response to a demand dated October
31, 2012 by union counsel that the employer apply the collective agreement in
compliance with the Board’s decision, on November 12 employer counsel wrote:
The Employer will not be immediately applying the Collective Agreement
to the production of transcripts. Vice-Chair Abramsky’s September 17,
2012 decision does not require the employer take this step.
The Employer will object to the Union seeking an order from Vice-Chair
Abramsky requiring the Employer to immediately apply the Collective
Agreement to transcript production. The Employer takes the position that
Vice-Chair Abramsky is without jurisdiction to issue such an order.
Furthermore, Vice-Chair Abramsky previously rejected the Union’s
request for an order of this nature, so the issue has already been decided.
The Employer reserves the right to raise additional objections in the event
that the Union actually seeks an order in this regard.
[5] The employer’s position in essence is that while the union may pursue redress for any
losses that may result from its continuing failure to apply the collective agreement, it
would be inappropriate for the Board to order it to apply the collective agreement.
Counsel submitted that the employer does not intend to continue to be in contravention of
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the collective agreement indefinitely. It intends to end the violation and to be in
compliance. He submitted that compliance can be achieved in different ways. It is the
employer’s right to determine how to come into compliance. It has decided to achieve
compliance by properly contracting out the work in question which would take the work
in question outside the bargaining unit. It was submitted that it was inappropriate for the
Board to direct the employer on “how to comply with the collective agreement”.
[6] In support of its position that the orders requested by the union ought not be issued, the
employer put forward four distinct arguments. The first was to the effect that orders of
the same nature were made before Vice-Chair Abramsky in Re Hunt, and were denied by
her in the decision dated December 4, 2009. Therefore, the doctrines of res judicata and
issue estoppel prevent the union from relitigation the same issue. A number of
authorities on the application of those doctrines were relied on.
[7] The employer’s second position was also based on res judicata and issue estoppel. It was
argued that even if I conclude that the same issue was not litigated in Re Hunt, the union
could and should have sought the orders it seeks now, before Vice-Chair Abramsky.
Having decided not to include these orders in its remedial request in Re Hunt, the union
cannot in hindsight decide to seek additional remedies through the instant grievance. A
number of authorities were presented as supporting the proposition that a union is obliged
to put is full and best case before an arbitrator, and that a case cannot be litigated in
piecemeal fashion.
[8] The third position advanced by the employer was described as a jurisdictional objection
to the orders requested. Counsel reminded that the employer has made it known that in
the exercise of its management rights it has decided to contract out the work in question,
so that the work would no longer be in the bargaining unit, and would be performed by
true independent contractors. It was submitted that if the Board orders that the collective
agreement be applied to the collective agreement in the face of this decision made by the
employer, that would be an unauthorized incursion by the Board into the employer’s
exclusive management rights.
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[9] The employer’s final argument is to the effect that based on the agreed facts and the
Board decisions in Re Hunt, the union has not demonstrated a prima facie case for any
remedy. It was submitted that the remuneration court reporters received, and continue to
receive, for performing the work of producing transcripts as independent contractors
leaves them “financially better off” than under the collective agreement.
[10] Employer counsel submitted that if the Board rejects all of the foregoing arguments and
determines that it has the jurisdiction to make the orders sought by the union, it should
nevertheless hear evidence from the employer about the impact such orders would have
on the work place and the harm they would cause to the employer, before deciding
whether to exercise that jurisdiction.
[11] The union submitted that the union’s first two arguments should be rejected outright
because the doctrines of res judicata or issue estoppel simply have no application in the
present case. Counsel argued that in Re Hunt the parties litigated the issues of whether
the work was bargaining unit work, whether the collective agreement applied to that
work, and whether court reporters performing that work were employees or independent
contractors. The Board ruled in favour of the union on all those issues. Therefore, there
is no attempt to relitigate those issues in this grievance. Such relitigation is in fact
unnecessary since the employer has conceded on all three issues, and agreed that it
continues to be in violation by not applying the collective agreement to court reporters
performing work of producing transcripts.
[12] Union counsel submitted that apart from that, the instant policy grievance is about the
employer’s conduct, i.e. its ongoing refusal to apply the collective agreement, following
the issuance of the 2009 Re Hunt declarations. Those declarations related to violations
that occurred from 2002. The instant grievance covers a different period than that
litigated in Re Hunt. In the circumstances, there is no relitigation as would attract the
doctrines of res judicata and issue estoppel.
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[13] Responding to the employer’s argument that the union could and should have sought
these orders in the Re Hunt proceeding, counsel argued that it would be unreasonable to
expect the union to seek compliance orders in anticipation that the employer may refuse
to comply with Board decisions. He submitted that the union was entitled, when it filed
the Re Hunt grievances, to expect that if the Board finds the work to be bargaining unit
work to which the collective agreement applies, the employer would end the violation by
applying the collective agreement. When it became clear, despite repeated requests by
the union, that the employer had no intention of doing so, the union had no option but to
seek orders that would compel compliance.
[14] With regard to the employer’s assertion of exclusive management rights to determine on
how to have the work of producing transcripts performed, counsel argued that the orders
it seeks do not in any way restrict the employer’s management rights. The union was not
seeking orders that would require the work in question be retained in the bargaining unit
in the future. Nor is it requesting for any order that would prohibit the employer from
contracting out that work in the future. The union simply wants to ensure that the
collective agreement is complied with as long as the status quo continues, and the work in
question remains within the bargaining unit. If and when a contract out is implemented,
the union would have to assess the situation, and file a separate grievance if it is of the
view that the contract out is not in compliance with the collective agreement.
[15] Union counsel cited s. 48(7)(3) of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act,
which provides:
Every collective agreement relating to Crown employees shall be
deemed to provide for the final and binding settlement by arbitration by
the Grievance Settlement Board, without stoppage of work, of all
differences between the parties arising from the interpretation,
application, administration or alleged violation of the agreement,
including any question as to whether a matter is arbitrable.
[16] Relying on authorities on the scope of an arbitrator’s remedial jurisdiction where the
mandate is to make a “final and binding settlement”, counsel argued that in the present
case where the employer continues to refuse to apply the collective agreement while
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conceding that such refusal results in a continuing violation of the collective agreement,
the only way the violation could be brought to an end is through a direct Board order to
cease and desist the violation and to comply with the collective agreement. Counsel
argued that such orders come well within the Board’s jurisdiction to provide a final and
binding settlement under s. 48(7)(3).
[17] Counsel argued that, contrary to the employer’s position, the union has established more
than a prima facie case that the employer continues to be in violation by failing to apply
the collective agreement to the work in question. The employer has explicitly conceded
that. It was argued that where there is a violation, there has to be a remedy. The remedy
has to be one that provides finality and puts an end to the violation. Counsel pointed out
that a collective agreement is not only about money. It provides employees with
numerous non-monetary rights such as the right to be represented by the union, the right
to grieve, job security, and seniority rights. The sole purpose of the orders sought by the
union is to ensure that court reporters have access to all of the rights and protections
under the collective agreement, which the Board has held apply to them.
[18] Union counsel submitted that if the Board concludes that it has the jurisdiction to make
the orders requested, given the agreement that the employer continues to be in violation,
evidence on the impact of the orders on the employer would be irrelevant. All of the
material facts are agreed to and any further delay in providing a final and binding
decision would be extremely prejudicial to the union.
[19] In reply, employer counsel agreed that whether res judicata and issue estoppel apply
would depend on whether the Board in Re Hunt, in its December 4, 2009 decision,
considered and rejected a request by the union for orders of the same nature as sought
here. Counsel relied on para. 18 of that decision as indicating that the union made the
same request there. That reads;
In argument, counsel for the union reiterated that the GSB has the
remedial authority to direct the Employer that transcript work is work of
the bargaining unit, to be performed by bargaining unit employees, with
full application of the collective agreement. It asserts that the Board
may direct the Employer as to how it must comply with the collective
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agreement. Otherwise, it suggests, that the Employer’s proposal will
mean that the parties will be back to litigating the “same issue”, making
the “same arguments”, leading to frustration, expense and significant
labour relations mischief as the parties would be back before the Board,
time and time again.
[20] Counsel submitted that the Board in that decision rejected the union’s request for an order
directing the employer must comply with the collective agreement. That is the same
order the union is attempting to obtain here. He submitted that in Re Hunt, Vice-Chair
Abramsky decided the liability as well as the remedy. The union is not now entitled to
seek remedies it failed to obtain before her.
[21] After careful review of the decision, I conclude that the Board in Re Hunt did not
consider, let alone deny, the orders sought here. In its decision dated December 4, 2009,
the Board’s discussion about its authority to provide “prospective remedies” occurred in
the face of an assertion by the union that “the Board may direct the employer as to how it
must comply with the collective agreement” (para. 18). The employer took the position
that, “the Board, by retaining jurisdiction over the “implications’ of the Hunt decision,
does not have jurisdiction to determine if its proposed response to the Hunt decision
comports with the collective agreement” (para.19). In effect, the Board was called upon
to rule upon the propriety of the employer’s proposed contract out and to order that the
employer not proceed with the proposed contract out. The Board recognized that any
remedial order which in effect prohibits the proposed contract out of the work of
producing transcripts would prospectively limit the employer’s management rights. The
Board held that the Hunt decision did not and could not alter the parties’ rights under the
collective agreement, including the employer’s management rights under article 2. All of
the provisions of the collective agreement including article 2 continued to apply to the
transcript production work. At p. 15 it noted that “… the Employer does not contest the
union’s right to challenge whatever actions it takes in regard to transcript services under
the collective agreement, through a new grievance, or under statute. It simply contests
the GSB’s jurisdiction to do so as part of the remedy in the Hunt decision”.
[22] At para. 37, Vice-Chair Abramsky concluded:
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In the case before me, however, it is my conclusion that I do not have the
jurisdiction to determine whether the Employer’s new proposed
regulatory model is consistent with the collective agreement, or the
Board’s decision in Hunt, as part of the remedial aspects of this case.
The Employer’s plan raises new issues, new facts and new legal
arguments and must be contested through a new grievance.
[23] At para. 53, the Board wrote:
Further, as the case law demonstrates, the remedial power of the Board
must be linked to the subject matter of the complaint and cannot address
new issues. As well do broad remedial powers do not confer jurisdiction.
It is my view that the Employer’s proposal in regard to transcript
production raises new issues. It was developed well after the decision.
Any challenge to it would be based on new facts and require a full hearing
and determination. The question of whether that new proposal comports
with the collective agreement or violates the Hunt decision does not “flow
from” the Hunt grievances. The Board’s declaration in Hunt does not give
the Board continuing jurisdiction to ensure compliance with the collective
agreement in relation to transcript production. It does not negate
management’s rights under the collective agreement on a go-forward
basis.
[24] It is apparent that in Re Hunt, the Board did not consider and reject a request for
compliance order in relation to past or current employer conduct. Rather, it was dealing
with a request by the union to rule upon the propriety of proposed future action by the
employer. Therefore, res judicata or issue estoppel have no application. The Board, in
Re Hunt, in fact, contrasted the request before it with the request before the Board in Re
Polax Tailoring Ltd., (1972) 24 L.A.C. 201 (Arthurs), where the Board did issue a
prospective remedy. At para. 54-55, Vice-Chair Abramsky wrote:
[54] The situation in Re Polax Tailoring Ltd, supra, was different. In that
case, the Union had sought to enforce the payment of arrears of monies
owed under the collective agreement to the Union’s benefit fund and
retirement fund. It was the second grievance brought by the Union on this
issue, and the Company had announced its intention to no longer be bound
by the collective agreement. The union requested that the arbitrator make
an order prospectively requiring payment of any future arrears so it could
move for court enforcement in the event of future breaches, without the
necessity of further arbitration hearings. In these circumstances, the
arbitrator ruled at par. 17 that he had “the power to make an order, quia
timet, restraining future violations of the agreement.’ The Latin words
“quia timet” mean because of fear or apprehension that rights may be
violated.
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[55] In that case, the relief clearly flowed directly from the grievance and
the factual situation. There was a continuing obligation to make payments
under the collective agreement; there was no question that the monies
were owed, or the amount. The Employer simply refused to recognize its
obligations under the collective agreement. The prospective remedy was
required in the circumstances. The order restraining future violations was,
using the words of Vice Chair Dissanayake in Howe/Dalton/Loach, supra
at par. 29, “absolutely necessary to finally and effectively remedy a
grievance.”
[25] In contrast to the Re Hunt case, in the present case the union is not requesting the Board
to rule upon the propriety of the employer’s future plan to contract out the work of
producing transcripts. Its request is similar to the request that was granted by arbitrator
Arthurs in Re Polax Tailoring Ltd, supra. Like there, the grievance here is about the
employer’s failure to comply with the collective agreement. As in that case, here there is
no dispute that there is a continuing obligation on the employer to apply the collective
agreement and that the employer has decided that it would not do so. It continues to be in
violation. Therefore, the prospective remedy in the form of cease and desist and
compliance orders, flows directly from the grievance.
[26] The Board sees no merit in the employer’s argument that the union is not entitled to seek
the orders in this grievance because it failed to seek them as part of the remedy in Re
Hunt. When the Board makes a declaration that certain conduct is in contravention of the
collective agreement, the Board as well as the grieving party is entitled to reasonably
expect that the offending party would cease that conduct and comply with the collective
agreement. The union is not obligated to seek explicit orders to comply, in anticipation
that the employer may not comply. In the present case, the Board’s expectation was in
fact expressed by the Board in its December 4, 2009 decision, where Vice-Chair
Abramsky clarified what the declaration meant. She stated that the declaration means not
only that the work is bargaining unit work to which the collective agreement applies, and
that 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
outside of the collective agreement in regard to transcription work.” (para.18). Thus
what the employer continues to do to date, i.e. treat court reporters as falling outside the
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collective agreement in regard to transcription work, is precisely what the Board has
explicitly stated it could not do. In the face of the employer’s continuing defiance, the
union is entitled to seek orders that would compel compliance through direct orders.
[27] The Board determines that it has the jurisdiction to issue the orders sought. The mandate
of the Board under the Act and the collective agreement is to provide a final and binding
settlement to the “difference between the parties”. The difference the Board is called
upon to settle is the employer’s alleged failure to apply the collective agreement to the
work in question. Once it is determined that such failure constitutes a violation, the
mandate of the Board is to provide a final remedy that would end the violation. Cease
and desist and compliance orders would meet that mandate.
[28] In OPSEU and Ministry of Community and Social Services (Berry), [1986] O.J. No. 52,
at pp. 6-7 (Ont. Div. Ct) the court commented as follows on the predecessor provision of
the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act, which provided that where a difference
between the parties is referred to it, the Board shall “decide the matter” and that such
decision is “final and binding”:
The object of arbitration boards, both in the public and private sector, is
the resolution of differences. That is the mandate of this Board. It has
been stated in unequivocal terms by this court. In R. V. O.P.S.E.U.
(1982), 38 O.R. 670, Linden J. said for the Divisional Court, (at p. 675)
…We are of the view that the Board was correct in its
interpretation of s. 18(1) in the circumstances of this case.
The plain and natural meaning of the words has been
adopted by the Board. In order to “decide the matter’ at
issue between the parties, the Board had the power, pursuant
to the wording of s. 18(1), to grant the job to an unsuccessful
applicant in appropriate circumstances. That is the clear
mandate of the Board pursuant to s. 18(1) and the labour
relations jurisprudence of this province. Our courts have
interpreted other labour relations legislation in a consistent
way in the past in order to arm arbitration boards with
sufficient weaponry to perform their responsibilities
effectively. Courts have been unwilling to limit the
remedial powers of arbitration boards so as to enfeeble
them. On the contrary, our courts have sought to ensure that
arbitration Boards can effectively bring about the final and
binding settlement of all differences between the parties. As
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Mr. Justice Lacourciere states in Re Samuel Cooper & Co.
Ltd. and Int’l Garment Workers [1973] 2 O.R. 841 at 846,
35 D.L.R. (3d) 501:
… the special tribunals created by unions and
employers, and directed by statute bring about final
and binding settlement of all differences, ought to
have the necessary powers to achieve such results.
(emphasis added)
The Board’s obligation under s. 19(1) is to “decide the matter’. When looked at without
the confinement imposed by Article 5.1.2. “the matter” grieved was wrong classification.
If the Board concluded that the classification was wrong, its mandate was to effect a
proper classification. Its jurisdiction is unrestricted. Its mandate is remedial. In making
the decision it made the Board refused to decide the matter, it simply finessed it. In
doing so it erred in law. Its error was so serious that, in my opinion, it falls into the
category of cases requiring the intervention of this court, in accordance with O.P.S.E.U.
v. Forer, supra.
[29] In Re Samuel Cooper, referred to above, the Divisional Court at para. 11, cited with
approval the following:
11. The majority award in the Amalgamated Electric Corp. case was
given in May, 1950, by Bora Laskin and C.L. Dubin (now Laskin, J. and
Dubin, J.A.) as members of a board of arbitration, whose authority to
award compensation was challenged because of the difficulty in the
enforcement. The following comments made in the majority award at p.
602 are equally applicable here:
As a matter of principle, and in the light of the terms of the
Agreement, this Board is of opinion that its power to make
a binding decision involves powers to direct such
affirmative action as would remedy the breach declared to
exist. A declaration or finding divorced from a direction
for its implementation does not, in this Board’s view, meet
the requirements of a binding decision. A decision is
binding when it requires the doing or not doing of
something by the defaulting party, related to the default of
which it is guilty and intended as a remedy for such default.
In so far as a declaration carries no obligation of
compliance in relation to the specific case, it cannot be a
binding decision.
[30] In Alberta Union of Provincial Employees v. Lethbridge Community College, [2004]
S.C.J. No. 24, the Supreme Court of Canada was dealing with the jurisdiction of an
arbitrator to make an award of damages in lieu of reinstatement following a finding that
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there was no just cause for termination. At. p. 54, the court made the following
observation:
54 For arbitration to be effective, efficient and binding it must provide
lasting, practicable solutions to workplace problems. Commensurate with
the notion of exceptional circumstances as developed in arbitral
jurisprudence is the need for arbitrators to be liberally empowered to
fashion appropriate remedies, taking into consideration the whole of the
circumstances. To rob arbitrators of access to the full breath of the
employment context risks impairing their role as final arbiters of
workplace disputes. Arbitrators are well positioned on the front lines of
workplace disputes to weigh facts and assess credibility as the
circumstances warrant.
[31] The Board concludes that this is a case where it clearly has the jurisdiction to make
cease and desist and compliance orders. Indeed, if the Board finds otherwise, it would
be a failure to exercise its jurisdiction.
[32] It is unnecessary for me to review the jurisprudence on the jurisdiction of an arbitrator to
provide remedies that have the effect of impacting upon or restricting the employer's
exclusive management rights. The orders sought here have absolutely no impact on
management rights. The union is not requesting, and the Board would not be providing,
orders to the employer on “how to” carry out the function of producing transcripts. The
union only seeks orders that the employer cease the on-going violation and that it apply
the collective agreement to what is admittedly bargaining unit work performed by
bargaining unit employees. As union counsel correctly pointed out, the employer’s
exclusive management rights under article 2 do not include a right to violate the
collective agreement or to not apply the collective agreement to bargaining unit work
performed by bargaining unit employees.
[33] The employer’s argument that the union has not made out a prima facie for any remedy is
premised on its view that court reporters are financially better off when treated as
independent contractors, rather than as employees in the bargaining unit. Assuming that
view to be correct, that is not a reason for the Board to refuse the orders sought. If that
reasoning is accepted, an employer would be entitled, for example, to individually
negotiate with bargaining unit employees for financial terms more favourable than their
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entitlement under the collective agreement, and refuse to recognize the collective
agreement or the bargaining agent. Because the employees are “financially better off”
under that arrangement, there would be nothing the union could do to compel the
employer to abide by the collective agreement or to recognize its status exclusive
bargaining representative of those employees. The collective agreement, as union counsel
pointed out, is not only about money. In any event, the enforceability of a union’s
representation rights and the terms of a duly executed collective agreement is not
contingent upon whether the subject employees are better off, financially or otherwise,
under the collective agreement or outside it.
[34] The Board declines the employer’s request that it receive evidence from the employer
about the adverse consequences that would flow, before deciding whether to exercise the
jurisdiction to issue the requested orders. This is a sort of “undue hardship” argument to
the effect that if the employer is compelled to comply with the collective agreement, it
would cause the employer significant operational problems and harm. Assuming such
consequences would result if the orders in question are issued, that in the Board’s view is
not a legitimate or appropriate reason for it to refuse the orders and allow further
continuation of the employer’s admitted violation.
[35] Article 22.13.6 provides that “the GSB shall have no jurisdiction to alter, change, amend
or enlarge any provision of the collective agreement”. If the parties intended that the
obligation to comply with the collective agreement applies only as long as such
compliance does not result in undue harm or hardship, it was open for them to negotiate
such a qualification. They have not done so. For the Board to refuse to uphold and
enforce the agreed upon terms of the collective agreement on the basis that it would cause
harm or hardship to one of the parties, would be to add to the collective agreement a
qualification that does not exist. That would be in contravention of the proscription in
article 22.13. 6.
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[36] It follows from the foregoing that none of the submissions advanced by the employer
causes the Board to refuse the remedial orders sought by the union. Therefore, the
Board orders as follows:
(1) The employer shall forthwith cease its violation of the collective agreement by
failing to apply the collective agreement to Court Reporters, who the Board has declared
to be employees performing bargaining unit work when producing transcripts.
(2) The employer shall forthwith apply the collective agreement to court reporters
performing bargaining unit work of production of transcripts, and shall not treat them as
independent contractors.
[37] The Board remains seized with jurisdiction with regard to any disagreement between the
parties as to the implementation of the orders made herein, and with respect to all of the
other grievances before it.
Dated at Toronto this 1st day of March 2013.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice-Chair