HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-1007.Gallucci.13-04-02 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#2012-1007, 2012-1008
UNION#2012-0542-0006, 2012-0542-0007
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Gallucci) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Government Services) Employer
BEFORE Michael Lynk Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Stephen Giles
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING
CONFERENCE CALL
February 6 & 7, 2013.
March 1, 2013.
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Decision
Introduction
[1] As per the mediation/arbitration provisions of Article 22.16 of the Collective Agreement,
the parties have agreed that this decision is without prejudice and without precedential
value.
[2] The two grievances before me engage the redeployment, displacement and temporary
assignment rights under Article 20 of the governing Collective Agreement between the
Ontario Public Service (OPS) and the Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(OPSEU). The grievor, Tony Gallucci, was laid off from active work on 2 June 2012 by
the Employer. At the time of his lay-off, he had been employed by the Ministry of
Government Services as a Peripheral Operator, holding the classification of a Data
Processing Technician (DPT) 5. His home position with the Ministry was located at 1201
Wilson Ave. in Toronto (the “Downsview location”), at one of its data operational
centres.
[3] In October 2010, the Ministry formally announced that it had decided to move the data
operations to Guelph. This included Mr. Gallucci’s position. As part of its announcement,
the Ministry served Mr. Gallucci with a formal notice concerning the move. He was
offered the choice of following the work to Guelph or exercising his rights under Article
20, which would enable him to seek redeployment into a vacancy in either his own
Ministry or with another ministry within the OPS. For various family reasons, moving to
Guelph was not an attractive option for Mr. Gallucci, and he elected in November 2010
to continue to work in Toronto until his position was declared surplus and, during the
same time, to seek redeployment elsewhere within the OPS. In January 2011, the
Ministry wrote to Mr. Gallucci, acknowledging his decision to decline the move to
Guelph, informing him that available job postings within the OPS could be found on a
government intranet portal, and inviting him to consider training opportunities.
Meanwhile, his work as a Peripheral Operator at the Downsview location continued
throughout 2011.
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[4] In a letter dated 17 November 2011, the Ministry served Mr. Gallucci with a detailed
letter, informing him that his position would be declared surplus as of 2 December 2011,
and that his layoff date would be 2 June 2012. Later in November, Mr. Gallucci chose to
formally trigger his Article 20 surplus rights and sought to be redeployed to another OPS
position within the Toronto area. On 2 December 2011, he received his formal Letter of
Layoff. As required by the redeployment process, he subsequently completed his
employee portfolio (which detailed his workplace skills, experience and abilities), and
delivered it in December to the Employer.
[5] Using Mr. Gallucci’s employee portfolio, the Employer sought to match him with various
redeployment possibilities during the ensuing months. The redeployment search was not
successful. On 1 May 2012, Mr. Gallucci received a formal notice from the Ministry,
informing him that he was not qualified for redeployment in any of the positions that he
applied for, as per Article 20.3 of the OPS Agreement. The Ministry notice also stated
that he was not qualified to displace any junior employees under Article 20.4.
[6] Three days later, on 4 May, Mr. Gallucci grieved the Ministry’s decision, asserting that
there were at least three other DPT5 positions in Toronto, all of whom has less seniority
than the grievor. He argued that the Employer had breached both Articles 20.3 and 20.4
of the Collective Agreement.
[7] As well, Mr. Gallucci filed a second grievance, also on 4 May 2012. In this grievance,
Mr. Gallucci asserted that the Employer had breached Article 20.8 by failing to find any
temporary work assignments for him during the last two months of his notice period. He
maintained that he was qualified to perform some of the wind-up work that was still
being conducted at the Downsview location prior to the final move, including the DPT5
Payment Processor positions. The Employer has stated that there were no temporary
positions in the Peripheral Operation Unit at the Downsview location during the last two
months of Mr. Gallucci’s surplus notice period within his capabilities, nor were there any
temporary vacancies for a DPT5 Payment Processor position during this period.
[8] Mr. Gallucci was laid off on 2 June 2012, and has not worked within the OPS since.
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[9] The Employer maintains that it had followed the Collective Agreement at all times during
the various notifications issued to Mr. Gallucci and during its redeployment and
temporary assignment searches on his behalf.
Collective Agreement
[10] The Union has alleged that Articles 20.3, 20.4 and 20. 8 of the governing OPS-OPSEU
Collective Agreement (2009-12) have been breached. They read as follows:
20.3 REDEPLOYMENT
20.3.1 An employee who has received notice of lay-off in accordance with this article shall be
assigned to a position that becomes vacant in his or her ministry or in another ministry during his
or her notice period provided that:
(a) the vacant position is within a range of classifications whose maximum rate is 5%
above and 15% below the maximum rate of the employee’s own classification; and
(b) the vacant position is within a forty (40) kilometre radius of his or her headquarters;
and
(c) he or she is qualified to perform the required duties; and
(d) there is no other person who is qualified to perform the required duties, who has a
greater length of continuous service
and who is eligible for assignment to the vacancy either pursuant to Article 20.3 or
Article 20.6 (Recall).
20.3.2 With mutual consent, an employee who has not been assigned under Article 20.3.1 shall be
assigned to a position that becomes vacant in his or her ministry or in another ministry beyond a
forty (40) kilometre radius of his or her headquarters provided the conditions outlined in Article
20.3.1 (a), (c) and (d) are satisfied. It is understood that the employee may request that the
Employer take into account any specific locations for redeployment, and the Employer will take
into account locations that are within a forty (40) kilometre radius of such locations. Relocation
expenses will not be paid.
20.3.3 If, in accordance with Article 20.3.2 an employee indicates that he or she is willing to be
assigned to a position that becomes vacant in a specific location beyond a forty (40) kilometre
radius of his or her headquarters and the employee is offered an assignment within a forty (40)
kilometre radius of that location, refusal of the job offer will result in lay-off at the end of the
notice period.
20.3.4 Where an employee has been assigned to a vacant position within a classification having a
maximum rate below the maximum rate of the employee’s own classification, pursuant to Article
20.3.1(a), the employee shall remain at his or her current rate of pay, without any salary
progression, until the expiry of his or her notice period, upon which the employee shall be placed
at the appropriate step on the salary range for the classification to which the employee has been
assigned.
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20.3.5 It is agreed that where an employee is assigned to a vacancy within a classification having
a higher maximum rate, pursuant to Article 20.3.1(a), it shall not be considered a promotion
under Article 7.
20.4 DISPLACEMENT
20.4.1.1 An employee who has completed his or her probationary period, who has received notice
of layoff pursuant to Article 20.2 (Notice and Pay in Lieu), and who has not been assigned, within
a period of five (5) months after the receipt of the notice of lay-off, in accordance with the criteria
of Article 20.3 (Redeployment) to another position shall have the right to displace an employee
who shall be identified by the Employer in the following manner as set out in Articles 20.4.1.2
to 20.4.1.10.
20.4.1.2 The Employer will identify the employee with the least seniority in the same
classification and the same ministry as the employee’s surplus position. If such employee has less
seniority than the surplus employee, he or she shall be displaced by the surplus employee
provided that:
(a) such employee’s headquarters is located within a forty (40) kilometre radius of the
headquarters of the surplus employee; and
(b) the surplus employee is qualified to perform the work of the identified employee.
20.4.1.3 If the surplus employee is not qualified to perform the work of the least senior
employee identified under Article 20.4.1.2 above, the Employer will continue to identify,
in reverse order of seniority, employees in the same classification and in the same
ministry until a less senior employee is found within forty (40) kilometres of the surplus
employee’s headquarters whose work the surplus employee is qualified to perform.
20.4.1.4 Failing displacement under Article 20.4.1.2 or 20.4.1.3 above, the Employer will
identify, in reverse order of seniority, employees in the classes in the same class series in
descending order until an employee with less seniority is found in the same ministry within forty
(40) kilometres of the surplus employee’s headquarters. The identified employee shall be
displaced by the surplus employee provided he or she is qualified to perform the work.
20.4.1.5 Failing displacement under Articles 20.4.1.2 or 20.4.1.3 or 20.4.1.4 above, the Employer
will review other classes which the employee held either on a full-time basis, or who performed
the full range of job duties on a temporary basis for at least twelve (12) months in the same
ministry within forty (40) kilometres of the surplus employee’s headquarters. The Employer will
identify, in reverse order of seniority, a less senior employee in the class with the maximum
salary closest to but not greater than the maximum salary of the surplus employee’s current
classification. The identified employee shall be displaced by the surplus employee provided he or
she is qualified to perform the work.
20.4.1.6 Failing displacement under Articles 20.4.1.2, 20.4.1.3, 20.4.1.4 or 20.4.1.5 above, if the
employee requests, the Employer will repeat the steps specified in Articles 20.4.1.2, 20.4.1.3,
20.4.1.4 and 20.4.1.5 with respect to positions beyond a forty (40) kilometre radius of his or her
headquarters. No relocation expenses will be paid.
20.4.1.7 Failing displacement under Article 20.4.1.2, 20.4.1.3, 20.4.1.4, 20.4.1.5 or 20.4.1.6
above, the Employer will identify, in reverse order of seniority, a less senior employee who is:
(a) in another ministry; and
(b) whose headquarters is within a forty (40) kilometre radius of the displacing
employee’s headquarters; and
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(c) whose position the displacing employee previously held either on a full-time basis, or
who performed the full range of job duties on a temporary basis for at least twelve (12)
months in that ministry; and
(d) if the employee previously held more than one position in that ministry, the position
with a maximum salary closest to but not greater than the maximum salary of the
displacing employee’s current classification.
The identified employee shall be displaced provided the displacing employee is qualified to
perform the work.
20.4.1.8 Upon the completion of five (5) months following commencement of the notice period,
the Employer will advise the surplus employee of the position into which he or she is eligible to
displace.
20.4.1.9 The surplus employee must indicate in writing to the Employer his or her intention to
displace the employee identified pursuant to Articles 20.4.1.2, 20.4.1.3, 20.4.1.4, 20.4.1.5,
20.4.1.6, or 20.4.1.7 above, as applicable. Written intention to displace must be received by the
Employee Mobility Coordinator no later than one (1) week following the date the surplus
employee received advice that he or she was eligible to displace an employee pursuant to Article
20.4.1.8 above.
20.4.1.10 An employee who does not indicate in writing to the Employer his or her intention to
displace within the time period stipulated by Article 20.4.1.9 above shall be deemed to have given
up his or her right to displace and opted for redeployment under Article 20.3 (Redeployment).
20.4.2 The first employee who is displaced by an employee exercising his or her right to displace
under Article 20.4.1 will have displacement rights. The employee displaced by the first displaced
employee will also have displacement rights but the employee he or she subsequently displaces
will not have any such right.
20.4.3 An employee who is displaced by an employee who exercises his or her displacement right
under Article 20.4 shall receive notice of lay-off or salary continuance, at the Employer’s
discretion. The displaced employee’s notice period or salary continuance shall be for a six (6)
month period.
20.4.4 Article 7.4 (Pay Administration) shall not apply where an employee displaces a less senior
employee pursuant to Articles 20.4.1.4, 20.4.1.5, 20.4.1.6 or 20.4.1.7 above, save and except that
Article 7.4 (Pay Administration) shall apply for the balance of the employee’s notice period only.
20.4.5 Except as provided in Article 20.4, employees who are displaced will have full access to
the provisions of Article 20.
20.8 TEMPORARY VACANCIES
20.8.1 Surplus employees shall be eligible for assignment into temporary assignments in their
own ministry in the last two (2) months of their notice. Such assignments are meant to provide
additional employment opportunities for surplus employees prior to lay-off. Where more than one
surplus employee matches the temporary assignment, the employee with greater seniority shall be
offered the temporary assignment. It is understood that such assignment of a surplus
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employee to a temporary vacancy has priority over Article 8 (Temporary Assignments).
20.8.2 A surplus employee shall retain his or her status in the Regular Service and current salary
entitlements while placed in a temporary assignment. Placement in a temporary assignment will
not constitute a promotion for pay purposes. Subject to Article 20.8.1, for placement into
temporary assignments, the employer shall use the same criteria and rules as for
assignment into vacancies under Article 20.3 (Redeployment).
20.8.3 An offer of a temporary assignment to a surplus employee must be in writing and must
specify the duration of the temporary assignment. The surplus employee shall have five (5)
working days in which to accept or reject the offer of a temporary assignment.
20.8.4 Surplus employees who are occupying a temporary assignment remain eligible for
assignment to permanent vacancies in accordance with the provisions of Article 20.3
(Redeployment) throughout their temporary assignment, but shall not continue to be matched to
other temporary assignments during the term of the temporary assignment; however, the
original temporary assignment may be extended by a maximum of three (3) months.
20.8.5 Where an employee in a temporary assignment is assigned to a permanent vacancy, the
reporting date to the permanent position shall be no later than one (1) month from the date of
offer, unless otherwise mutually agreed upon with the employee, the ministry with the permanent
vacancy and the ministry with the temporary assignment.
20.8.6 When a temporary assignment takes place, the employee shall not be unreasonably denied
the opportunity to complete any portion of training already underway. Surplus employees who
refuse a temporary assignment shall continue to be considered for assignment into permanent
vacancies for the duration of their surplus notice period, but not for further
temporary assignments.
Evidence
[11] The Union called Mr. Gallucci as its sole witness. The Employer did not call any
witnesses. On consent, the parties entered a number of documents as evidence.
[12] Mr. Gallucci began his employment with the OPS in February 1989, and was
continuously employed by the Ministry of Government Services until his lay-off in June
2012. All of his jobs had involved the performance of various data processing
responsibilities. Since June 1991, he had worked as a Data Processing Technician (DPT)
5 at the Downsview location of the Ministry. In 2008, Mr. Gallucci’s job title was
changed to Peripheral Operator (while maintaining his DPT5 classification), as part of an
operations re-organization by the Employer. According to his most recent job description,
the work in this newly re-titled position included the operation of “peripheral equipment
within a large-scale computer centre, including mainframe and midrange hardware”, and
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the provision of “tape library storage management and support services for multimedia in
a multi-user 7/24/365 environment”. The vast bulk of his work in this re-titled position
was in the data library area, where he performed data back-up, data storage and data
security operations for the Government of Ontario’s financial information. As well, as a
secondary task, he also took part in the mass printing of government-issued cheques for
public service payroll, and for social assistance and guaranteed annual income programs,
among others, as well as assisting in the creation of cheque stock.
First Grievance – Redeployment and Displacement
[13] Mr. Gallucci’s first grievance asserted that he was qualified to perform the work – as per
Article 20.3.1(c) of the Collective Agreement – of at least three other DPT5 positions in
Toronto with less seniority than he possessed, and that he ought to have been deployed in
these jobs. He identified the Payment Processing positions as work that he was
sufficiently qualified to perform because of his past workplace experience. Alternatively,
he asserted that he ought to have been able to displace a more junior employee in the
DPT5 category.
[14] The Employer maintained that he was not qualified for any of these redeployment or
displacement positions which he had identified. In particular, it stated that he lacked two
significant qualifications:
• Lack of knowledge respecting related cheque production systems; and
• Lack of knowledge respecting the capabilities, applications, standards,
support tools and techniques of the cheque payment and electronic
funds transfer systems and production environment (e.g, RACF, CICS,
JCL, TSO/ISPF, Royal EPM system and Direct Deposit Tracing
System), and related utilities and security measures, knowledge of
government accounting and accounting controls, reconciliation, and
audit control policies.
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[15] In his oral evidence on direct examination, Mr. Gallucci testified that he had performed
the work of the Payment Processing position in the past. He pointed to his own
experiences in the printing of large stock cheque runs, including payroll and social
assistance cheques, and T4s and T5 forms. He cited his general familiarity with the audit
controls policies within the OPS. Outside of the Ministry, Mr. Gallucci stated that he had
obtained his Certified Property Manager designation through a community college
program in 1996-7, and then worked for a small employer as a co-op placement during
his own off-duty time. In this position, he operated the employer’s payroll system,
transferred funds electronically, performed the direct deposit tracking system, conducted
income tax deductions, set up a regular payment schedule, and handled the bookkeeping.
Regarding the knowledge of cheque payment systems, Mr. Gallucci stated that he had
handled the printing of cheques, he had performed audits and reconciliation, he had
offloaded data from tape to print, and he ensured that service agreements had been
followed and time schedules met. He pointed to his experience in operating mainframe
applications which involves a number of the relevant operating systems, such as ISPF,
SAR, JCL, IMS, CICS and RACF. Mr. Gallucci acknowledged that he had not worked
much with the Royal EPM System.
[16] Mr. Gallucci provided this information to the Employer in his December 2011 employee
portfolio.
[17] On cross-examination by counsel for the Employer, Mr. Gallucci acknowledged that his
work in the OPS primarily involved the storage and back-up of data, not its creation.
Regarding his experiences with the administration of the payment process, he stated that
his involvement with the payment tapes went to the printing of the information, as the
data had already been assembled on the tapes by OPS employees at other locations. Once
printed, the cheques would be shipped back to the separate payment processing location
for distribution. If errors occurred in the printing process, he and his team would identify
the problem, but they would not usually attempt to rectify it, as that was beyond their
duties and capabilities. Mr. Gallucci acknowledged that his familiarity with the large-
scale printing of cheques for the OPS did not extend to the creation and assembly of the
financial data that preceded the printing of the cheques.
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[18] As well, Mr. Gallucci also acknowledged on cross-examination that he was not familiar
with the OPS’s system that arranged for the direct deposit of funds into banks and
financial institutions, nor was he familiar with the tracing system used by the OPS to
monitor its direct deposit system. When asked about his qualifications regarding the audit
control policy in the OPS (which was part of the job description for the Payment
Processing position that he had applied for), Mr. Gallucci stated that he had some
familiarity with audit control at the property management company that he had worked at
during his off-duty hours in the 1990s, but he had acquired no experience in this area
during his years at the Ministry. Similarly, he acknowledged that he had not been
exposed to the OPS’s particular financial reconciliation policies or its accounting control
system during his Ministry career.
[19] On re-examination, Mr. Gallucci asserted that he possessed the requisite qualifications to
perform the Payment Processing work
Second Grievance – Temporary Assignments
[20] In direct examination, Mr. Gallucci stated that his last day of active work was on 2 June
2012. At the time of his lay-off, he was responsible for ‘mainframe vaulting’, which
involved the shipping of data storage to an off-site location, known as Iron Mountain. He
testified that various other employees junior to him performed the work that he had done
over the next five to six months until the Downsview operations were completely moved
to the new location in Guelph. Mr. Gallucci’s working hours during his last weeks at
Downsview was a 7 am to 3 pm shift, Monday to Friday; these were the same hours that
the employees who replaced him worked during the next five to six months before the
closure of the Downsview location. He asserted that he could have performed this work
as a temporary assignment during this time period.
[21] On cross-examination, Mr. Gallucci was asked if he was aware of any vacancies between
April and June 2012, which were his last two months of active employment. He
acknowledged that he did not know of any such vacancies. Counsel for the Employer put
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the proposition to Mr. Gallucci that the employees working at the Downsview location
during the latter half of 2012 performed work that was closely tied to moving the
Downsview operations to Guelph, as opposed to continuing the work that Mr. Gallucci
had done. He replied that he was not present at Downsview after his lay-off, so he could
not affirm or deny that proposition.
Arguments
Union
[22] Counsel for the Union submitted that the question before me raised by the first grievance
was whether Mr. Gallucci had the present ability to perform the work of the Payment
Processing work that he had applied for through the redeployment and displacement
processes under Article 20.3 and 20.4. He acknowledged that the prevailing test was
established by the Grievance Settlement Board in OPSEU v. Ontario (Ministry of
Municipal Affairs and Housing) (Loebel) (331/82, 15 February 1983) (Verity), where the
panel established that the meaning of “qualified to perform the required duties” in
redeployment situations meant that the grievor had to be able to perform the designated
work without a training period, a trial period or any form of familiarization. Counsel
argued that, while Loebel indicated that “qualified” meant ‘present ability’, it also
suggested that ‘present ability’ should be interpreted broadly. Counsel asserted that,
within this definition, Mr. Gallucci possessed a range of skills and qualifications from his
23 years in the OPS respecting data operations and storage, and the large-scale printing of
government cheques that would satisfy the “qualified” standard. He pointed to the
grievor’s testimony and his belief that he did have the present ability to step into these
redeployment positions.
[23] Respecting the second grievance, Counsel for the Union argued that the Employer could
have, with some diligence, found some temporary work for Mr. Gallucci within the
requirements of Article 20.8
[24] In addition to Loebel, the Union also relied on OPSEU v. Ontario (Ministry of the
Environment) (Bouchard), (GSB # 1587/98) (30 October 2002) (Brown); and
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OPSEU v. Ontario (Ministry of the Environment and Energy) (Strunc), [2000]
O.G.C.B.A. No. 21 (Harris).
Employer
[25] The Employer first addressed the Union’s arguments regarding the redeployment and
displacement grievance. Counsel reminded me that the prevailing test is drawn from the
language of the Collective Agreement: that “qualified to perform the required duties” in
redeployment situations has consistently been interpreted to mean that the grievor had to
be able to perform the designated work without a training period, a trial period or any
form of familiarization.
[26] Turning to the facts of this case, the Employer submitted that the Payment Processing
position that Mr. Gallucci sought was fundamentally a financial position. Taking both his
OPS work experience and his outside employment background, it argued that he lacked
specific knowledge of many of the position’s core duties. Mr. Gallucci had no
transferrable experience with respect to the reconciliation of cheques, the production of
cheques, or the mainframe systems that assembled the information which created the
financial data for the production of the cheques. As well, the Employer stated that Mr.
Gallucci had acknowledged on cross-examination that he did not possess sufficient
experience or understanding of the electronic transfer of funds within the OPS. Nor did
he have any knowledge of the OPS’s auditing policy. In sum, Counsel stated, the
evidence points one way only: that while Mr. Gallucci had acquired many important
skills and qualifications during his years at the Ministry, these particular qualifications
did not provide him with the requisite knowledge for the Payment Processing jobs.
[27] Respecting the second grievance concerning the availability of temporary assignments,
Counsel for the Employer maintained that Mr. Gallucci on cross-examination retreated
from the position that other employees at the Downsview location were performing work
in the months after his lay-off that he had previously done. Indeed, he argued, neither the
Union nor Mr. Gallucci presented any concrete evidence, beyond assertions, that the
temporary work which he felt he was capable of performing was available either at the
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Downsview or the Ministry during this time. The Employer submitted that this supports
its position that there were no temporary positions available at the Downsview location
during the relevant time period that Mr. Gallucci could have performed, as per Article
20.8.
[28] As authority, the Employer submitted OPSEU v. Ontario (Ministry of Citizenship)
(Henderson), (GSB # 1097/91 & 1269/91) (31 March 1992) (Barrett); and OPSEU v.
Ontario (Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Rural Affairs) (Ansari), (GSB # 0482/97)
(13 November 1998) (Abramsky). It also relied upon OPSEU v. Ontario (Ministry of
Municipal Affairs and Housing) (Loebel) (331/82, 15 February 1983) (Verity).
Decision and Reasons
First Grievance – Redeployment and Displacement
[29] The first task is to lay out the legal test respecting displacement and redeployment. We
begin with the language in Article 20.3.1(c), which reads:
“he or she is qualified to perform the required duties”
As both counsel have stated, the thirty-year-old Loebel test is our starting point for giving
us the meaning of this phrase. Loebel involved the interpretation of the equivalent
provision – Article 24.2.3 – in the then governing Collective Agreement. It similarly
provided redeployment rights to an employee “provided he is qualified to perform the
work...”. For our present purposes, no argument was made that there was any material
difference between the phrases “required duties” and “work”.
[30] In Loebel, Arbitrator Verity stated, at p. 18, that a grievor “has the right to be awarded the
job if he is deemed qualified”. He then added three considerations to the Article’s
meaning of “qualified” in these circumstances: (i) Article 24.2.3 did not provide for “a
training period, or trial period or familiarization period”. In other words, the employee
had to be ‘job-ready’ to step into the position and perform its duties without an
introductory phase; (ii) “‘Qualified to perform the work’ must relate to the requirements
of the job in question”. Hence, the Employer has to take into consideration only the
actual tasks of the position under consideration; and (iii) The surplussed employee must
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be ‘minimally’ competent in all of the major components of the job. This does not mean
that he or she must possess skill and knowledge in all activities of the targeted position,
but it does require that she or he possesses the ready-to-go skills and knowledge in the
main components of the job.
[31] In the subsequent caselaw interpreting this pertinent phrase on displacement and
redeployment rights in surplus circumstances, layers have been added to the meaning of
the term. I have summarized the submitted law as follows:
i. Article 20.3.1 is not a job competition provision. Surplussed employees are
to be given extra consideration when applying for jobs. (Henderson, 1992,
supra, pp. 12-13).
ii. Surplussed employees who seek their bargained displacement and
redeployment rights under this Article need only have the minimal
qualifications to perform the essential duties of the position(s) being
sought. However, this refers to present qualifications, not those that could
be obtained through extensive training. (Henderson, 1992, supra, p. 12).
iii. The Employer’s decision that an employee does not have the “minimum
qualifications” for the targeted job must be correct. This means that a
surplussed employee is entitled not only to a fair hearing, but also is
entitled to the position in question if she or he can do the work, as per the
meaning of ‘qualified’ stated above. (Ansari, 1998, supra, p. 10). [It should
be noted that the Collective Agreement language during this period used
the express language “minimally qualified to perform the job”. The
language in the present Collective Agreement has reverted to “qualified”
without the term “minimally” acting as a modifier. I will leave the potential
debate for another case as to whether the removal of “minimally”
materially changes the precise meaning of “qualified” or not.]
iv. One recognized exception to the ‘present ability” test from Loebel is that
the no-training/trial/familiarization period rule does not apply to
circumstances where training for a position is mandatory. This applies to
the displacement of junior employees, but not to the filling of vacancies.
(Bouchard, 2002, supra, pp. 10-11).
[32] Applying the Loebel test and its subsequent refinements to the facts of our present case, I
am persuaded that Mr. Gallucci’s first grievance cannot succeed. It is my finding that Mr.
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Gallucci, notwithstanding his able abilities and qualifications acquired through the years
that he worked in the Peripheral Operator position, did not have the requisite
qualifications to step into the Payment Processing DPT5 positions and competently
perform the main aspects of the job in a ‘job-ready’ state as understood by the Loebel
test. Carefully weighing the evidence submitted to me, I am satisfied that Mr. Gallucci
did not possess the degree of competence, whether minimal or not, respecting some of the
core aspects of the position. In particular, he did not the requisite qualifications with
regards to the core financial features of the Payment Processing job, such as the cheque
production systems, the knowledge of government accounting and accounting control, the
direct deposit system, the financial reconciliation policies and the audit control policies
utilized by the OPS. I acknowledged that Mr. Gallucci had gained some familiarity with
financial systems during his involvement with the property management company in the
1990s, but I am not persuaded that the financial systems employed by such a company
can, by themselves, adequately equip an employee to be sufficiently qualified to perform
some or all of the core financial duties inherent in the Payment Processing position within
the OPS.
[33] Accordingly, the first grievance is dismissed.
Second Grievance – Temporary Assignments
[34] I am also unable to accept Mr. Gallucci’s second grievance, going to his claim for
temporary assignments as a surplussed employee, as per Article 20.8. It is my ruling that
the Union has not satisfied the burden of proof in this case. Specifically, the Union bears
the onus to establish that vacancies existed during the last two months of Mr. Gallucci’s
active employment – in our case, between April and June 2012 – for which he would
have been qualified for a temporary assignment, as set out in Article 20.8.2. On the
evidence presented, this has not been established. The Union has not provided me with a
persuasive prima facie case that temporary positions existed within the Ministry during
the relevant period that Mr. Gallucci could have performed within his job qualifications
and capabilities.
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[35] Accordingly, the second grievance is also dismissed.
Conclusion
[36] For the reasons offered, both of the grievances are dismissed. This ruling should not be
seen as an adverse reflection on Mr. Gallucci’s abilities or the various qualifications that
he acquired during his years in the OPS. Rather, the ruling goes to the fact that, on the
evidence presented, the Employer satisfied its contractual obligations under the
Collective Agreement and did not breached any of its duties owed to Mr. Gallucci during
the surplus process.
Dated at Toronto this 2nd day of April 2013.
Michael Lynk, Vice-Chair