HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-0934.Taylor.14-04-17 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#2012-0934
UNION#2012-0453-0004
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Taylor) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(St. Lawrence Parks Commission) Employer
BEFORE Jules Bloch Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Adrienne Lei
Dewart Gleason LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Kevin Dorgan
Ministry of Government Services
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING
CONFERENCE CALLS
April 5, 2013
May 22, July 25, November 25, 2013,
February 12, 2014
- 2 -
Decision
[1] I was appointed to hear the grievance of Patrick Taylor. The hearing was held in
Kingston Ontario on April 5, 2013. The parties agreed I had jurisdiction to hear this
matter.
[2] On April 5, 2013, the parties executed a Memorandum of Settlement (“Mos”), which
directed the reassessment of the qualifications and abilities of the Grievor and the
incumbent for the blacksmith position. Pursuant to the terms of the settlement, the parties
jointly agreed to evaluators.
[3] The Grievance Settlement Board (“GSB” or “the Board”) convened a telephone
conference call on February 12, 2014 at 4:00 pm. The conference call was held to deal
with an issue of actual bias or apprehension of bias raised by the Employer against an
evaluator chosen by the parties for his expertise in historical blacksmithing.
[4] The parties agree that this is a Med/Arb and that this decision has no precedential value.
[5] In arriving at my conclusions, I have reviewed all of the submissions and the case law
presented by the parties. In rendering my decisions, I have not reproduced the parties’
arguments or the case law citations.
[6] The evaluation procedure was agreed to in a MoS dated April 5, 2013. The parties
agreed that L.D. Johnston be appointed blacksmith evaluator. Mr. Johnston issued his
evaluation on October 2, 2013.
[7] Mr. Johnston is not a professional evaluator. He is a professional blacksmith, Gunsmith
and Restoration Consultant. His evaluation of the candidates is unusual. He breaks down
their individual abilities in great detail. He finds Mark Garvock, the successful applicant
in the original job posting, to be completely wanting in most aspects of historical
blacksmithing.
[8] What makes Mr. Johnston’s evaluation unusual is his running commentary throughout
the evaluation report. He dissects the evaluatees’ strengths and weaknesses and then
offers, what he perceives to be, helpful commentary. Parts of the commentary could be
described as demeaning.
[9] The St. Lawrence Parks Commission (“the Commission” or “the Employer”) asserts that
I should find actual bias in the evaluation of Mark Garvock. In the alternative, the
Commission submits that I should find that the evaluator, Mr. Johnston displayed an
apprehension of bias against Mr. Garvock. In either case, I should, in the Commission’s
view, declare the historical blacksmith evaluation to be of no value, and direct the parties
to have someone else perform the historical blacksmith evaluation.
- 3 -
Actual Bias
[10] The Commission’s actual bias allegations stem from what the commission states is the
state of mind of the evaluator. The commission asserts that because Mr. Johnston
concluded that Mr. Garvock had, “very little experience or knowledge in this field”; “no
background as a farrier”; and that Mr. Garvock was a “low skill journeyman”, he is
biased.
[11] To find actual bias, there must be evidence of the evaluator forming a global impression
of a candidate positive or negative based on a characteristic or other information that may
bias you. (AMAPCEO (Alderson) v. Ontario, GSB#2006-1007).
[12] Context is very important when looking at actual bias. Mr. Johnston is a historical
blacksmith. He was chosen to evaluate the candidates precisely because of his
experience as a historical blacksmith.
[13] Mr. Johnston uses inappropriate language to explain his findings. There are some very
unfortunate and unnecessary comments made about Mr. Garvock by Mr. Johnston. Mr.
Johnston finds that Mr. Garvock is wanting in many areas of historical blacksmithing.
Mr. Johnston does not express himself well, however, explaining Mr. Garvock’s abilities,
after testing, in an inappropriate manner does not change the obvious problems that Mr.
Garvock demonstrated through the written and practical testing.
[14] While it is true that Mr. Johnston has great experience in historical blacksmithing and he
has an opinion about the type of blacksmith that is necessary to work at a historical site,
he has not demonstrated actual bias. I find that Mr. Johnston’s comments and his view of
the candidates was made after he had performed the tests and not before. The
conclusions Mr. Johnston arrives at are not biased, rather they are conclusions he reaches
based on the facts he finds during the testing. The Commission has not demonstrated to
the Board, what preconceived animus or improper predisposition Mr. Johnston has
against Mr. Garvock.
Apprehension of Bias
[15] I adopt the test of Apprehension of bias from the decision Parker v. Canada (Deputy
Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs), 2010 PSST 21 (Archibald) at paragraph 52:
Would a reasonably informed bystander looking at the process
reasonably perceive bias on the part of one or more of the persons
involved in the assessment of the complaint?
[16] The test is an objective test from the vantage point of a reasonably informed bystander.
In this case, the parties agreed to a historical blacksmith to do the evaluation. By
choosing a historical blacksmith to perform the evaluations the parties have consented to
someone who has a definite perspective on blacksmithing. In effect, the parties have
agreed to a historical orientation and approach to be used in the evaluation. This is not an
apprehension of bias issue.
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[17] It is unfortunate that Mr. Johnston used inappropriate language in explaining his
conclusions, however, that does not change the findings in the evaluation. The Employer
has not raised any objection to the actual testing; the objection is to the running
commentary found throughout the evaluation. This does not change the fact that, based
on the practical test and the written test, that Mr. Garvock’s skills as an historical
blacksmith are not as good as Mr. Taylor’s historical blacksmith skills.
[18] All of the Employer’s assertions that the evaluator displayed an apprehension of bias
have to do with the written communication of the results and not the testing itself. The
Commission has not raised any issue about the actual testing.
[19] The evaluator was chosen precisely for his historical approach to the evaluation. In
asking me to conclude that the evaluator displayed an apprehension of bias, the
Commission is relying on the evaluator’s approach to the evaluation and the conclusions
he reached after the testing. The parties sanctioned the evaluator’s approach when they
agreed that a historical blacksmith would conduct the evaluation.
[20] The test results speak for themselves. Looking at the marking scheme of the written
portion of the test and the description of the practical test, one cannot discern any form of
bias, rather you find strong opinions based on a through evaluation. I find that the
evaluation of Mr. Garvock and Mr. Taylor by Mr. Johnston was performed without any
form of bias.
[21] Mr. Johnston’s written comments are not the type of comments that one expects to find in
an evaluation, however, their existence does not point to actual bias or an apprehension of
bias, but rather conclusions found on the basis of the various completed tests. In sum, I
find there is neither actual bias nor an apprehension of bias on the part of the evaluator
Mr. Johnston.
[22] Although I find that Mr. Johnston conducted his task without bias or an apprehension of
bias, I find that some of the comments made in describing the evaluation of both Mr.
Garvock and Mr. Taylor to be inappropriate. To remedy the issue of inappropriate
comments, I direct the Employer to identify to the Union the offending comments that it
wishes to have expunged from the record. If the Union is not in accord with expunging
the offending comments that the Employer wants expunged, the Board will canvass the
parties for dates for a teleconference which will allow the Board to determine which
comments stay on the record and which comments are expunged.
[23] I am seized of the application, interpretation and implementation of this decision.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 17th day of April 2014.
Jules Bloch, Vice-Chair