HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2014-0200.Ilika.14-11-07 DecisionPublic Service
Grievance Board
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Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
P-2014-0200
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
John Ilika Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Kathleen G. O’Neil Vice-Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
John Ilika
FOR THE EMPLOYER Caroline Cohen
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING September 22, 2014.
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with the complaint of John Ilika in which he alleges that the employer has
violated its Pay on Assignment Policy in not giving him a promotional increase when he was
awarded a new Field Intelligence Officer (FlO) job with increased responsibilities. The employer
asks that the matter be dismissed without a hearing on the merits on the basis that it is barred by
the Minutes of Settlement of an earlier grievance, and the Board has no authority to grant the
remedies claimed.
Factual Context
[2] The facts are not significantly in dispute. It is the legal conclusions to be drawn from them on which
the parties disagree. In any event, on a preliminary motion such as this, the Board takes any
disputed facts asserted by the complainant as true and provable without making any factual
findings at this stage.
[3] Mr. Ilika became an FlO in 2008 on an acting basis and was appointed on a permanent basis to this
position in April 2011 at which time he received a 3% increase, in accordance with the employer's
Pay on Assignment Policy.
[4] In June 2013, as a result of a restructuring, the employer decided to reduce the number of FlO's
from twelve to four. Initially the employer planned to hold an open competition for these four
positions. The complainant, along with the other FIOs, was advised that if he was not successful in
the competition, he would be eligible to compete for other jobs or be declared surplus.
[5] On June 28, 2013, the complainant filed a complaint concerning this restructuring. As a remedy, he
requested to be placed in one of five enumerated positions, and further that "any of the positions
chosen will be at the top of the pay grade due to my many years of experience". The other affected
FIOs filed similar complaints.
[6] The complaints of the FIO’s were resolved on the basis that the employer would restrict the
competition to the twelve incumbent FIOs, which was also consistent with the Board’s decision in
Williams et al and the Ministry of Correctional Services decision, 2002 CanLll 45640 (ON PSGB)
(Leighton). The Memorandum of Settlement dated July 26, 2013 signed by the complainant
released the Ministry from any and all actions or complaints directly or indirectly related to the
circumstances giving rise to the June 28, 2013 complaint. Further, in paragraph 6 of that
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Memorandum, the complainant agreed that any facts related to the circumstances leading to the
complaint would not form the basis of any remedy in future complaints.
[7] Mr. Ilika applied for and was one of the successful applicants in the restricted FlO competition in
February 2014. The salary range and classification was listed on the job posting. He acknowledges
that his classification was AM19, the same in the new FIO position as in the former one. The
employer does not dispute that the new position entails responsibility for a larger number of
institutions and inmates. Mr. Ilika also asserts that the new job description significantly increased
the responsibilities and workload of the position.
[8] The nub of Mr. Ilika’s complaint is that certain other employees within the CSOI (Correctional
Services Oversight & Investigations Division) are paid at a higher rate, which he alleges creates an
imbalance within the unit and fosters an environment of resentment. He clarified at the hearing that
these were employees covered by the AMAPCEO (Association of Management, Administrative and
Professional Crown Employees of Ontario) collective agreement who have the ability to move
annually on the grid, whereas he does not.
[9] As monetary remedy, Mr. Ilika seeks a 5% raise, retroactive to his start date in the new position, to
be moved in the salary grid to an amount equal to his colleagues who do the same work as he
does, and lump sum payment for expenses.
Considerations and Conclusions
[10] It is the employer’s position that the facts raised by the complainants do not make out a viable or
prima facie case for any remedy from this Board. Moreover, the complainant was aware that the
rate of pay and classification for this position had not changed at the time he applied and has not
referred to any term or condition of employment that provides otherwise.
[11] Counsel for the employer argues that the Pay on Assignment Policy does not apply to the
appointment of the complainant to his restructured FOI position in February 2014 because it was
not a promotion or lateral transfer that could have attracted an increase in pay under that policy.
Rather, as the complainant acknowledges, it was a competition for an FIO position at the same
classification level. Unless there is a change in classification, a job change does not meet the
definition of a promotion under the Pay on Assignment Policy, which reads: Promotion occurs when
an employee is assigned to a position in a class with a higher salary range maximum .
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[12] As to the complainant’s view that the job should be paid more, on its merits, or in comparison to
colleagues in bargaining units, employer counsel submits that the PSGB does not have jurisdiction
to decide whether the new position ought to have been re-classified to a higher classification with
pay comparable to any other employee. Nor does the Board have jurisdiction to decide that Mr. Ilika
should be paid more because of his exemplary performance. This is pursuant to s. 4(2)2 of
Regulation 378/07 of the Public Service of Ontario Act, which provides:
The following matters cannot be the subject of a complaint about a
working condition or about a term of employment:
...
2. The assignment of the public servant to a particular class of position.
…
5. The compensation provided or denied to a public servant as a result of
their performance
[13] As well, the employer disputes that the failure to give an increase on appointment to the new FIO
position is in violation of its "equal pay for equal work and pay equity policies" as alleged. Counsel
observes that the complainant has not established that he was paid incorrectly according to his own
classification. Rather, his claim is based on the fact that others are paid more. In this regard,
Counsel refers to a decision dated April 28, 2008 of our sister tribunal, the Grievance Settlement
Board (GSB), Ontario Public Service Employees Union v. Ontario (Environment), 2008 CanLII
19779 (ON GSB) (Dobroff et al). Counsel submits that even though the GSB has a broader
jurisdiction, it has clearly held in Dobroff, and the cases discussed in that decision, that a complaint
that other employees were treated more generously is not a viable one unless some contractual
right of the grievors had been adversely affected by the treatment of the other employees. Counsel
invites the conclusion that this is even more applicable at the PSGB with its explicitly restricted
jurisdiction. Counsel urges a similar finding to that in Dobroff to the effect that the complaint
amounts to a non-viable “me too” grievance, because the complainant is contesting the treatment of
other employees but not disputing that he was paid correctly within his own classification.
[14] As to the claim for placement at the top of the grid, the employer's position is that there is currently
only one way for a manager to move through the salary grid in any given classification and that is
through Pay for Performance, another issue over which the PSGB has no jurisdiction, pursuant to
s.4 (2) 5 of Regulation 378/07 of the Public Service of Ontario Act, set out above.
[15] Counsel for the employer also submits that the grievance is barred by the settlement of the 2013
grievance. Counsel notes that the request for monetary rem edy in the earlier grievance is
equivalent to the one now before the Board. It is the employer’s position that this was settled in
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2013 because all matters related to the competition were settled at that time, including the rate of
pay for the position.
[16] In his submissions, Mr. Ilika stated that the responsibilities of the FIO job after the reorganization
reflect those of other positions such as Investigator, Compliance Officer and Use of Force Auditor.
He submits that the employer should have taken the opportunity of the hiring into the new positions
to remedy what he identifies as a pay gap with bargaining unit colleagues in his unit. It is his view
that the FIO’s continue to be treated in an inequitable manner to their substantial disadvantage. He
considers this a breach of the Pay on Assignment Policy and the employer’s policies about equal
pay for equal work and pay equity. He notes that one of the principles articulated in the policy
states that: Employers should be paid equitably in their assigned salary ranges, taking into account
such factors as skills and job-related experience, relationships to peers and career progression. In
this respect he described the many skills acquired and positive evaluations he has received over
the course of his career and work as an FIO.
[17] As to the earlier grievance which was settled, it is the complainant’s view that the current one is a
completely separate complaint, as it deals with a claim to an increase in pay upon taking on the
expanded duties of the new position, while the earlier one was an objection to the process at the
time of the restructuring.
***
[18] Where the Board considers that a complaint does not make out a case for the orders or remedies
requested, even if all the facts stated in the complaint are assumed to be true, the Board may
dismiss the complaint without a further hearing. I have carefully considered whether Mr. Ilika has
set out a viable claim to the additional compensation he seeks.
[19] In order to have a potentially successful grievance, there must be a term or condition of the
complainant’s employment, a breach by the employer, and a remedy connected to the breach that
is within the Board’s statutory power to give. It is my finding that the complainant’s arguments and
materials do not provide a sufficient basis for the complaint to succeed, even accepting the facts he
asserts to be true, such as that he has increased responsibilities, or that others are paid more to do
the same or very similar work. What is lacking is any facts that make out a possible breach, as well
as that the Board does not have the jurisdiction to decide that the complainant ought to be paid
more, unless there is a contractual term requiring that he be paid more.
[20] In this case, there is an existing term or condition of employment that is potentially applicable to the
complainant’s situation, i.e., the Pay on Assignment Policy. However, the undisputed facts, such as
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that the complainants classification was AM19 both before and after the competition, mean that
there is not a viable basis for a breach of that policy. The provision on which the complainant relies
is paragraph 7.3, which, for managerial employees, provides pay on promotion of 3 percent or an
increase to bring the employee to the minimum rate of the new salary range, whichever is greater.
In addition, higher increases may be given on a discretionary basis. However, as noted above, the
definition of promotion in the policy on which the complainant relies requires that the employee be
assigned to a position in a class with a higher salary range maximum. The undisputed facts
asserted establish the contrary, i.e., he was assigned to the same job class before and after the
assignment to the new FIO position, rather than one with a higher salary maximum.
[21] Further, to the extent that the complaint is requesting compensation on par with employees in
different classifications, it is essentially a complaint about which job class the complainant has been
assigned to. Such a complaint is specifically removed from the Board’s authority by s.4 (2) 2 of
Regulation 378/07 of the Public Service of Ontario Act, set out above. The Board does not have the
power to decide that the changes in the FIO job description are significant enough that the position
should be classified higher or differently.
[22] The complainant also claims equal pay for equal work. There is no contractual provision in
evidence requiring that the FIO position be paid the same as some other position, even if it does
very similar work. Nonetheless, if there were anything in the alleged facts that established a viable
basis for a claim that the complainant was being paid differentially in a way prohibited by statute or
some other broader principle of law, the Board would have the jurisdiction to let the claim proceed.
However, there is nothing in the material before me that constitutes a viable case of a violation of
any policy or legislative provision as to equal pay for equal work or other prohibited forms of wage
disparities.
[23] It can be seen from the provincial legislation providing for equal pay for equal work, and equal pay
for work of equal value, that the kind of unequal pay that is illegal is based on gender or sex
discrimination. See, in particular, s. 42 (1) of The Employment Standards Act and section 8 of the
Pay Equity Act where it is made clear that differences in compensation which are the result of
compensation policies which do not discriminate on the basis of sex or gender do not constitute
failures to pay equal pay in the sense prescribed by Ontario law. More generally, there is no
suggestion of any gender-based disparity here, or of discrimination in wages on the basis of any
other ground prohibited under the Ontario Human Rights Code or other legislation. The only
allegation is that those covered by the AMAPCEO collective agreement have more favourable
terms for similar work. There is nothing in the material before me that persuades me that this is a
viable claim of a breach of the complainant’s terms and conditions of employment, as there is no
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statute, policy or other term and condition of employment in evidence which arguably prohibits that
kind of difference.
[24] In the result it is not necessary to deal with the employer’s argument concerning the settlement of
the earlier claim, as the claim is not viable, even if the more recent complaint was not considered
resolved by the earlier one.
[25] In the circumstances, even accepting all the facts asserted by the complainants to be true and
provable, it is clear that the complaint cannot succeed. There is no viable case stated in the written
materials or oral submissions, so that the complaint is dismissed for want of a prima facie case.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 7th day of November 2014
Kathleen O’Neil, Vice-Chair