HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-3614.Chabot et al.14-08-05 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
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GSB#2013-3614, 2013-4264, 2013-4266
UNION#2013-0628-0003, 2014-0628-0001, 2014-0628-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Chabot et al) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care) Employer
BEFORE Michael V. Watters Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Billeh Hamud
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Kevin Dorgan
Ministry of Government Services
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING July 29, 2014
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Decision
[1] This proceeding was conducted pursuant to article 22.16 of the collective
agreement. This article provides for a mediation/arbitration procedure with the intent
that grievances be resolved in an expeditious and informal manner.
[2] At the outset, the parties filed an Agreed Statement of Facts. That document is
appended to, and forms part of, this Decision.
[3] This Vice-Chair met separately with the parties and received submissions with
respect to the issues in dispute. No viva voce evidence was presented. I was also
provided with the following authorites: Re Ontario Hydro and Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 1000 (1996), 62 L.A.C. (4th) 420 (Picher); Re Pepsi- Cola
Canada Beverages (West) Ltd. and United Food and Commercial Workers International
Union, Local 330W (1994), 44 L.A.C. (4th) 47 (Chapman); CUPE Local 1750 (Union) and
the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board, GSB #2010-2688 (Nairn); OPSEU (Beck)
and the Ministry of Government Services, GSB#196-89 (Watters); OPSEU (Osborne)
and the Ministry of Natural Resources, GSB#2011-3795 (Petryshen); OPSEU (Knapp)
and the Ministry of Finance, GSB#2720-96 (Abramsky); OPSEU (Giasson) and the
Ministry of Labour, GSB#2250-87 (Watters); OPSEU (Pino) and the Ministry of
Education and Training, GSB#1236-94 (Kaplan); OPSEU (Group Grievance) and the
Ministry of the Attorney General, GSB#1455-00 et al. (Abramsky).
[4] Prior to the preparation of this Decision, I reviewed and considered the Agreed
Statement of Facts, the parties submissions and the authorities relied on. Having done
so, I conclude that the grievances are to be dismissed for the reasons set out below.
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[5] The job ad posted in September, 2013 in respect of the original competition (Job
ID: 56981) set out a mandatory requirement of “advanced level oral French”. It is
agreed that the grievors did not possess this qualification. At the time of the posting,
their positions were designated as unilingual positions.
[6] Sudbury is designated as a French speaking area under the French Language
Services Act. Approximately seventy-five percent (75%) of the positions at the Central
Ambulance Communications Centre (CACC) are designated as bilingual. I accept that
it was the Employer’s management right to determine if it needed bilingual Ambulance
Communications Officers 1 in order to deliver service to the public. There is nothing to
indicate that the Employer, in this instance, acted improperly or in bad faith when it
assessed the need. In my judgment, the French language requirement was both
reasonable and closely related to the job to be performed. I further accept that the
Employer had a legitimate business purpose when it posted the positions as bilingual. I
note, for the record, that the position material to this proceeding is the “1 fixed-term,
full-time ACO1 position, for up to 12 months”. It follows that, as the grievors did not
possess the mandatory qualification, they are not entitled to the position or to the
remedies claimed in the grievances.
[7] The Union challenged the fact that the posting in issue did not require
applicants for the bilingual positions to have already completed the Entry to Practice
(ETP) training or to have secured an Ambulance Communications Officer Certificate.
It is agreed that “in most job postings for ACO positions across the province (including
most job postings for ACO positions in the CACC in Sudbury), candidates are required
to have already completed ETP training/are required to already have an ACO
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Certificate”. Ms. Dumouchel, the successful applicant, did not have this qualification at
the time she was awarded the position. As stated in paragraph #18 of the Agreed
Statement of Facts, she was informed that completion of the ETP training was
mandatory and that failure to do so in the required timeframe would result in an
immediate termination of the secondment and a subsequent return to her home
position. Simply put, Ms. Dumouchel was advised that completion of the necessary
training was a requirement for continued employment in the position.
[8] Given the fact the grievors did not possess the French language qualification, the
Employer’s decision to not require the completion of ETP training, or the acquisition of
an Ambulance Communications Officer Certificate, in advance of the application is
immaterial and of no consequence with respect to the resolution of these grievances. If
the Employer had decided otherwise, then Ms. Dumouchel would not have qualified for
the position. However, this would not have resulted in any of the grievors being
selected for the job, as they did not satisfy the language requirement set out in the
posting.
[9] I accept that the Employer framed the posting as it did for a legitimate business
purpose, namely, to recruit bilingual applicants for the Sudbury CACC. I note that the
Employer ultimately had to staff the position first with Ms. McAllister and then with
Mr. S. Fong on a unilingual basis between January 6, 2014 and the date of the
incumbent’s return, given “there were no bilingual ACO1 employees at the CACC in
Sudbury that were available to perform this temporary assignment”.
[10] In the final analysis, I find that the Employer’s decision was a permissible
exercise of discretion under its management rights. The decision was consistent with
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the job specification referenced in paragraph #11 of the Agreed Statement of Facts.
Additionally, there is no evidence of any bad faith on the part of the Employer. Finally,
I have not been persuaded that the Employer failed to fairly and uniformly apply the
selection criteria with respect to the instant competition.
[11] The grievors, and particularly Ms. Chabot and Mr. Bone, claimed that they,
rather than Mr. Fong, should have been appointed to backfill the temporary position
after Ms. Dumouchel vacated same in April, 2014. Their claim was premised on having
greater seniority than Mr. Fong. I do not think that this claim flows from their
grievances concerning their lack of success in the original competition which
commenced in September, 2013. Rather, the complaint relates to the Employer’s
actions, many months later in April, 2014, when Ms. Dumouchel chose to leave the
position. I am satisfied that the grievors should have filed a second independent
grievance if they wished to contest Mr. Fong’s appointment. In my view, this matter
was not captured by their initial grievances.
[12] In any event, I accept that the Employer acted properly when it appointed Mr.
Fong to backfill the position, as it did so to provide for a developmental opportunity
within the CACC. I was advised that the grievors had all previously worked in fixed-
term, full-time ACO1 positions, whereas Mr. Fong had not. There is no evidence to
establish that the Employer acted in bad faith or in an improper or arbitrary fashion
with respect to Mr. Fong’s appointment.
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[13] For all of the above reasons, the grievances are dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 5th day of August 2014.
Michael V. Watters, Vice-Chair
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APPENDIX
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Background
1. This case deals with grievances filed by Louise Chabot, Darryl Bone and Josie McAllister
(“the Grievors”) regarding a competition for a bilingual Ambulance Communications Officer
1 (ACO1) position located at the Central Ambulance Communications Centre (CACC) in
Sudbury in the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
2. The CACC in Sudbury is generally staffed with the following complement of positions:
• 12 regular full-time bilingual ACO1 positions;
• 4 regular full-time unilingual ACO1 positions;
• 4 regular full-time ACO2 positions;
• Several fixed-term, on-call ACO1 positions; many of these positions are unilingual
and some are bilingual
3. The fixed-term, on-call ACO1 employees are generally hired on 6-month contracts.
These employees backfill the regular full-time employees when they are absent from work.
As such, the hours of work of these employees may vary from 0 to 40 hours per week.
4. At the time they filed their grievances, the Grievors were employed with the CACC in
Sudbury in fixed-term, on-call ACO1 positions. Their positions are designated as unilingual
positions.
5. The Grievors do not possess “advanced level oral French” skills. Therefore the Grievors
are not qualified for bilingual ACO1 positions at the CACC in Sudbury.
6. During a shift, if a unilingual ACO cannot speak French, and he/she is communicating
with a Francophone caller, the Employer’s local guidelines state that the call is to be
transferred to a bilingual ACO, or the “Language Line Services” may be used. The
“Language Line Services” is a third-party telephone service by which an ACO is
immediately connected with an interpreter who may translate for the caller and the ACO.
Original Competition (Job ID: 56981) – September 2013
7. On September 10, 2013, a job ad was posted (Job ID: 56981) for the following positions
at the CACC in Sudbury:
• 2 regular, full-time ACO1 positions;
• 1 fixed-term, full-time ACO1 position, for up to 12 months
8. The job ad restricted the competition to employees in the Ontario Public Service living or
working within 125 km of the CACC in Sudbury.
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9. The fixed-term, full-time ACO1 position was posted to backfill for a regular, full-time
ACO1 employee who was scheduled to go off work on pregnancy/parental leave starting in
October 2013.
10. The job ad listed “advanced level oral French” as a mandatory requirement for all three
positions.
11. The job specification attached to the job ad also stated the following:
Staffing and Licensing:
Mandatory Staffing Requisites for Position: as noted under the Ambulance Act of
Ontario incumbents will be free of any criminal conviction considered relevant to the
position of Communications Officer; ability to successfully complete pre-employment
standardized testing; obtain a Ambulance Communication Officer Certificate and
successfully complete/sign off at the local training; within thirty days of employment
acquire a valid Standard First-Aid and Targeted-Responder CPR and obtain a
Restricted-Radio Operators Certificate through the ACO program provided by the
ministry.
Designated positions: FLS oral Advanced.
12. The deadline for applications was September 24, 2013.
13. All three positions were filled through the competition, as follows:
• The 2 regular, full-time ACO1 positions were awarded to Nancy Gosselin and Daniel
St. Pierre. The start dates for these two employees was January 6, 2014.
• The 1 fixed-term, full-time ACO1 position was awarded to Roxanne Dumouchel. The
start date for Ms. Dumouchel was April 14, 2014.
14. At the time she was awarded the fixed-term, full-time ACO1 position, Ms. Dumouchel
had “advanced level oral French”. However, Ms. Dumouchel did not have an Ambulance
Communication Officer Certificate.
15. In order to obtain an Ambulance Communication Officer Certificate, Ms. Dumouchel was
required to attend and complete Entry to Practice (ETP) training. This training, which lasts
6-8 weeks, must be completed in order to obtain an Ambulance Communication Officer
Certificate.
16. In most job postings for ACO positions across the province (including most job postings
for ACO positions in the CACC in Sudbury), candidates are required to have already
completed ETP training/are required to already have an ACO Certificate.
17. Ms. Dumouchel’s start date was set for April 14, 2014, since the earliest available ETP
training was scheduled for April 2014.
18. On December 19, 2013, Ms. Dumouchel signed a Temporary Assignment Agreement,
which including the following terms:
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OTHER CONDITIONS
…
The Employee is required to attend the mandatory Entry to Practice (ETP) –
Ambulance Communications Officer Training Program starting on April 28, 2014.
Attendance is mandatory for duration of the certification program and as such,
requests for time off will be denied to ensure employee is qualified for this seconded
position.
Failure to certify in ETP, will result in an immediate termination of this secondment
and employee will be required to return to home position with proper notice.
19. In the interim, between January 6, 2014 and April 13, 2014, one of the Grievors, Ms.
Josie McAllister, was temporarily assigned to a fixed-term, full-time ACO1 position. Under
this fixed-term contract, Ms. McAllister was not required to possess “advanced level oral
French” skills. The Employer hired Ms. McAllister on a fixed-term contract for this 3 ½
month period in order to backfill for Ms. Dumouchel, given Ms. Dumouchel’s delayed start
date. There were no bilingual ACO1 employees at the CACC in Sudbury that were available
to perform this temporary assignment.
20. Following Ms. Dumouchel’s departure from the position in April 2014, the Employer
hired an employee into a unilingual, fixed-term ACO position to backfill for the employee on
maternity leave.
Additional vacancy leads to job ad for employees on notice of lay-off – October 2013
21. In the fall of 2013, two additional vacancies arose in the CACC in Sudbury. These
vacancies related to two regular, full-time ACO1 positions.
22. These two vacancies arose because one employee successfully competed for an ACO2
position, and the other employee resigned to accept a position outside the Ontario Public
Service. Both ACO1 positions left by these 4 employees had been designated as bilingual
positions requiring “advanced level oral French”.
23. The Employer decided to award these two positions to two unsuccessful candidates in
the competition described above (Job ID: 56981). In order for the Employer to “reach back”
into a prior competition, the conditions under Article 6.1.2 must be met. This Article states:
6.1.2 Notwithstanding Article 6.1.1 above, the Employer may hire qualified
candidates who previously applied for the same vacancy or new position provided
that a competition was held during the previous fourteen (14) months following the
closing date of the posting and was within 125 kilometres of the work location of the
previously posted position, and provided that the position has cleared surplus. The
Employer in these circumstances is not required to post or advertise the vacancy or
new position. Where the Employer uses this provision, it shall notify the Local Union
President where the vacancy or new position exists, ten (10) working days prior to
filling the vacancy or new position. (FXT, SE)
[underlined emphasis added]
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24. In order to first ensure that the vacancies had “cleared surplus”, the Employer posted a
job ad for each of the two positions (Job ID 57967 and Job ID 58634). Both job ads clearly
stated that the posting was “restricted to OPSEU represented employees who have or have
been deemed to have received notice of layoff and eligible for a Targeted Direct
Assignment in accordance with OPSEU Article 20.”
25. One of the job ads (Job ID: 57967) (which was posted on October 17, 2013, with a
closing date of October 31, 2013) did not list “advanced level oral French” as a mandatory
requirement for the position.
26. The Grievors saw this job ad (Job ID: 57967) for OPSEU-represented employees on
notice of lay-off. The Grievors advised local management that they wanted to apply for the
position.
27. It was at this time that local management became aware that the job ad (Job ID: 57967)
contained an error in that it had not listed “advanced level oral French” as a mandatory
requirement for this position.
28. There were no Targeted Direct Assignment matches to Job ID: 57967.
One of job ads for employees on notice of lay-off corrected to include bilingualism
requirement – December 2013
29. On December 23, 2013, the Employer re-posted Job ID: 57967 as Job ID: 59848.
However, this time, the job ad included “advanced level oral French” as a mandatory
requirement for the position. The closing date was listed as January 9, 2014. Once again,
the job ad was restricted to OPSEU-represented employees on notice of lay-off.
30. On December 23, 2013, each of the three Grievors received a letter from local
management which stated:
Thank you for bringing our attention the Job Ad posted on October 17, 2013 with Job
ID 57967. As you pointed out, this Job Ad did not specify as a mandatory
requirement for the qualifying application to be bilingual. As you are aware this job
was posted for Sudbury CACC position number 182805 which is designated as a
Bilingual Ambulance Communications Officer 1.
As a result of your question related to the October 17, 2013 posting, and after
reviewing the job ad, it has been decided to repost using the proper criteria and
ensuring only qualified individuals who are bilingual and are in notice of lay off may
apply. Please see the attached new posting with Job ID # 59848 and with a closing
date of January 9, 2014.
According to the posting with Job ID # 59848, only individuals in notice of layoff and
who are able to meet all the requirements inclusive of proficiency in English and
advanced level oral French may apply.
Grievances
31. On December 24, 2013, Louise Chabot filed a grievance which stated:
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STATEMENT OF GRIEVANCE:
I grieve that competition 56981 was improper and was conducted in violation of Article 2 –
Management Rights, Article 3 – No Discrimination/Employment Equity, Article 6 – Posting
and Filling of Vacancies or New Positions and any other Acts, Articles or Policies that may
apply.
SETTLEMENT DESIRED:
That I be awarded the position and be reimbursed for all lost pay, benefits, credits, seniority
and overtime lost as a result of the Employer’s violation of the Collective Agreement. That I
receive interest at the appropriate formula for said monies owed. That I receive a written
apology from the Employer. Any other remedy that the Arbitrator deems to be appropriate.
32. Almost identically worded grievances were filed by Josie McAllister on January 18,
2014, and by Daryl Bone on January 24, 2014.
Employer fills vacancies pursuant to Article 6.1.2
33. There was no Targeted Direct Assignment matches for Job ID: 59848 and Job ID:
58634, and as such, the positions “cleared surplus”.
34. As a result, in January 2014, the Employer “reached back” to the job competition that
occurred in the fall of 2013 (Job ID: 56981) and, pursuant to Article 6.1.2 of the Collective
Agreement, hired two unsuccessful candidates from that earlier competition (Crissy
Gravelle and Kim Ross) into two bilingual, regular, full-time ACO1 positions. At the time,
both Ms. Gravelle and Ms. Ross were already working in bilingual fixed-term, on-call ACO1
positions.
Additional events
35. Ms. Dumouchel left her employment at the CACC in Sudbury only a few weeks after
beginning her fixed-term, full-time contract on April 14, 2014. Ms. Dumouchel never
completed the ETP training required under her Temporary Assignment Agreement.
36. One of the Grievors, Josie McAllister, successfully competed for a unilingual, regular,
full-time ACO1 position in CACC in Sudbury. She has held this regular, full-time position
since April 28, 2014. The two other Grievors remain in fixed-term, on-call ACO1 positions.
Parties’ positions
37. It is the Union’s position that the prerequisite qualifications for the Unilingual position
should be the same as the Bilingual Ambulance Communications Officer position.
38. The Employer's position is that it is not prohibited from hiring candidates into ACO
positions who have not already completed ETP training/who do not already possess an
ACO certificate. In these circumstances, the candidate's completion of ETP training and
successfully obtaining an ACO Certificate is a requirement for continued employment in the
ACO position.