HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2014-1876.Sanders et al.15-01-22 DecisionPublic Service
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PSGB#P-2014-1876
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Sanders et al Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Attorney General) Employer
BEFORE Kathleen G. O’Neil Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Heather Sanders
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS Completed August 29, 2014.
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with the complaint of Heather Sanders and a group of thirty-
three other Managers in the Victim/Witness Assistance Program (V/WAP) in
which they assert that compensation for managers in the Ontario Public Service
was applied unequally and unfairly. This is based mainly on the fact that, for the
fiscal years 2011-2012 and 2012/2013, managers at the top of their pay grade
received compensation in the form of a lump sum which managers not yet at the
top of their pay grade did not receive. The complainants submit that this
inconsistent treatment contravenes government policy aimed at ensuring that the
pay for performance policy is applied fairly and consistently.
The Background Context
[2] The complainants are among many who have filed complaints with this Board
contesting certain aspects of their compensation, and/or that of others of their
colleagues, for the fiscal year 2011/2012 and ongoing, flowing from decisions by
the employer related to pay for performance. In that year, pay for performance
was set at 0%. In explaining the background of this widespread issue, the Board
wrote the following concerning similarly situated complainants in its recent
decision Smith et. al and the Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community
Safety and Correctional Services,, PSGB # P-2012-4155, 2014 CanLII 48098
(ON PSGB), dated July 9, 2014 :
As employees excluded from collective bargaining, they are
covered by the Management Compensation Plan (MCP), which is
set by a combination of directives issued by Management Board of
Cabinet and government-wide compensation policies consistent
with them, rather than by collective negotiations as is the case for
members of bargaining units. For several years prior to 2012,
employees such as the complainants have been able to increase
their compensation by only one route: a favourable pay for
performance rating from their superiors. Those ratings were
translated, according to annually set policy, into a range of
percentage increases. A zero percentage rating was reserved for
those with problematic performance ratings, and a person covered
by the MCP who met or exceeded performance expectations
received an increase in each of the years leading up to this
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complaint. That changed in 2011/2012 because of fiscal restraint,
when the range of performance awards was set at 0%, basically
freezing wages, regardless of whether performance was worrisome
or wonderful. In the policy dated September 28, 2012 which
describes this, one reads that performance pay for the 2011-12
year is set at zero percent for non-bargaining unit Ontario Public
Service employees, and that “the earnings of non-bargaining unit
employees, who were eligible for performance pay, are to remain at
2011 levels.”
[3] As with the Smith complaint, the focus of this complaint is what appeared to
some as an exception to the general wage freeze. This was explained in the
Smith decision as follows:
Despite the general lack of increases, some members of the
Management Compensation Plan received lump sum payments in
the end of 2012, while others did not, and it is this difference that
the complainants are seeking to remedy. The employer sees the
lump sum payments as a way to ensure that the managers who
received them did not experience a decline in their basic annual
earnings, while the complainants see them as an arbitrary favouring
of the group of employees already at the maximum in 2011, by
giving them a payment which was unavailable to others. The
payments were provided on December 20, 2012 and were equal to
the amount of lump sum performance awards paid in 2011.
[4] The Smith et.al. complaint was dismissed in part as beyond the Board’s
jurisdiction, and in part because it did not disclose a factual basis for a viable
complaint, known as a prima facie case, as it would have required the Board to
set new terms and conditions of employment in order to grant the complaints.
Given the similarity of this group complaint to that dealt with in the Smith et.al.
decision, the Board wrote to the complainants, pursuant to the Board’s Rule 9,
indicating its intention to dismiss the complaint as one related to pay for
performance, providing them with a copy of the Smith decision, and giving the
complainants an opportunity to make submissions before it did so. Rule 9 reads
as follows:
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
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dismiss the complaint without a hearing or consultation. In its
decision the Board will set out its reasons.
Considerations and Conclusions
[5] The complainants took the opportunity to make submissions, in which they
argued that their complaint was not related to “compensation provided or denied
to a public servant as a result of the evaluation of his or her performance.”
These are the words used by s. 4 (2) of Regulation. 378/07 under the Public
Service of Ontario Act to exclude complaints related to pay for performance from
the Board’s jurisdiction, part of the foundation of the dismissal of the Smith
complaints. The complaints state that their complaint is, instead, “about unfair
pay for equal work and unfair pay practices, which have nothing to do with the
evaluation of managers’ performance.” The complainants’ submissions go on to
complain of the payment of lump sums paid to some managers but not others, on
the basis that they had nothing to do with performance, and were based on a
policy which they had not seen. The complainants ask that the Board request
and review that policy before concluding that their complaint does not fall within
its mandate.
[6] Further, the complainants submit that the employer has given mixed messages
about whether the lump sums paid in 2012 and later relate to pay for
performance or not, as the payments were in the same amounts as the lump
sums paid to those managers in 2011 as part of their pay for performance. The
complainants submit that they were told that the payments were made for
political reasons to make sure the amount of compensation on the T-4 slips of
the managers who had received the lump sums matched that of the year before,
and that such reasons fly in the face of the principles of transparency and
accountability applicable to the Ontario Public Service. The complainants see
the employer’s position that the Board does not have jurisdiction over the
complaint as an acknowledgment that the lump sums were in fact pay for
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performance, and a position inconsistent with the one taken by employer
representatives at the Stage Two dispute resolution meeting.
[7] The complainants also state that some managers who received the lump sum
were asked not to say anything about it, and that there was no communication
provided to managers as to the purpose of the lump sum payments. The
complainants ask: why the secrecy? Where is the transparency?
[8] On the basis of unequal pay for equal work and unfair pay practices, the
complainants urge the Board to take jurisdiction and hear their complaint.
[9] Employer counsel responded to these submissions, in most relevant part, as
follows:
The complainants have now confirmed that this complaint is not to seek
pay for performance for 2011/12 or 2012/13. On that basis the Board can
ignore the parts of the Smith et.al. decision which refer to that line of
argument. We wish to clarify one point however. The complainants have
asserted that the Employer has changed their position by calling the lump
sum payment pay for performance. The complainants, with respect, are
mistaken. The Employer is not and never has characterized the lump sum
payment made to some employees and not others as pay for
performance. What the Employer has always said is that all employee’s
pay for performance was set at 0% for the years at issue.
With respect to the remainder of the complaint, the Board in Smith et.al
dealt precisely with the policy that provided for the lump sum payments
made in 2011/12 to those employees that were at the top of their range in
2010/2011. As the Board is aware, the policy was produced for the
hearing in Smith et.al and then commencing at paragraph 6, the board
sets out the relevant parts of the policy word for word.
It appears that the complaint here is the very same as those that were
advanced in Smith et.al and Kaine et. al.: that the lump sum payments are
arbitrary and unfair. It is the employer’s view that those arguments were
dealt with thoroughly by the Board in both Smith et.al and Kaine et. al.and
we therefore respectfully request that this complaint be dismissed without
a hearing as the Board has already determined it lacks the remedial
jurisdiction to render a decision on the merits.
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[10] The Board has carefully reviewed this complaint, in light of the submissions
referred to above, and the applicable policy, which is set out in relevant part in
the Smith et.al decision. The complainants’ view that the lump sum payments
were unfair, and not introduced or supported in a transparent way, is common
among the complainants in the Smith group and many other complainants who
filed complaints with the Board on the same or similar grounds. Given the
similarity in the complaints, and the applicability of the same principles, the Board
finds that the result must be the same as in the Smith et.al decision. The Board is
of the view, for the reasons sent out more extensively in the Smith et.al decision,
that this complaint is, in substance, all about the denial of pay for performance in
the fiscal years from 2011/12 and onwards, and therefore beyond the Board’s
jurisdiction. As the Board wrote in Smith et.al,
The nub of the complaint is the failure of the employer to pay those
not at the maximum of the pay grid in 2011 a lump sum payment in
2012. The basic fact that those not at the maximum of the pay grid
in 2011 stayed there, and had no way to increase their basic annual
earnings is because they were denied pay commensurate with their
performance in that fiscal year. …
The undisputed fact is that failure to pay any such lump sum
payments flows from the decision to set the performance pay
awards at 0% for 2011/2012, and to freeze the basic annual
earnings of MCP employees at the level they had reached in 2011.
Further, and despite the complainants’ characterization of the lump
sum payments as arbitrary, it is also undisputed that the lump sum
payments maintained the annual earnings of those who were at the
maximum of the pay grid in 2011 at the level they had achieved as
a result of the application of pay for performance levels for the fiscal
year 2010/2011. Thus, the uncontested facts establish that the
compensation policy for 2011/2012 treats both sets of employees
the same in terms of leaving them all at the level of basic annual
earnings they had achieved in 2011. For those who were at the
maximum of the pay grid in 2011, the 2012 payment served to
maintain their level of basic annual earnings, rather than limiting
them to the maximum of the pay grid, with no additional
remuneration, which the policy defines as a decrease in annual
earnings.
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[11] In this complaint, the request for relief is very explicit in requesting
compensation based on the complainants’ 2011-2012 and 2012-2013
performance ratings, and ongoing into 2014 and beyond. Complaints
about “compensation provided or denied to a public servant as a result of
his or her performance” are specifically removed from the Board’s
jurisdiction by s. 4(2) of Regulation 378/07 which provides that such
complaints cannot be the subject of a complaint to this Board. The Board
is a creature of statute, with only the powers permitted by statute. Thus,
the Board lacks the power to remedy failure to pay the requested
performance-based compensation.
[12] As noted, the complainants also argue that the lump sum payments amount to
unequal pay for equal work and unfair pay practices. These arguments were
also made by the complainants and dealt with by the Board in the Smith et.al
decision. As to the equal pay argument, the Board wrote as follows:
There is also the claim for equal pay for equal work, including the
statement that the arbitrary bonus payments violate the spirit of the
Pay Equity Act. This aspect of the complaint has the ring of an
allegation of an illegal compensation provision. And if there were
anything in the alleged facts that established a viable basis for such
a claim, 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. 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 that 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.
The only discrimination alleged is between those at the maximum
of the pay grid in 2011, and those who were not. There is nothing
in the material before me that persuades me that this is a viable
claim of a breach of the complainants’ terms and conditions of
employment, as there is no statute, policy or other term and
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condition of employment in evidence which arguably prohibits that
kind of difference.
The above remarks are equally applicable to this complaint.
[13] As to the issues about transparency and general fairness of the disputed
compensation terms, the Board wrote in response to similar themes in the
Smith et.al. complaint:
Although it may be that specific communication earlier on might
have given the complainants better understanding of the lump sum
payments, and allayed concerns expressed in this complaint, there
is nothing in the material before me that establishes a viable
complaint of a violation of a specific term or condition of
employment as to transparency, or specific amount of notice. As to
the fact that the employer set the performance percentage at 0%
after the performance year,
the facts do not establish a viable case of a breach of the policy in
this respect. The complainants had notice, in the longer standing
pay for performance policy of the employer’s practice of setting the
level of the performance award, if any, after the performance cycle,
even if their attention was not specifically drawn to it before the
compensation freeze at issue in this decision. More generally, as in
the Garratt decision, cited above*, the allegations concerning
transparency and fair and equitable treatment concerning wages
are inseparable from the elements of the complaint which
essentially ask the Board to set different terms and conditions of
employment. I am not persuaded that they make out a viable
allegation that is within the Board’s remedial authority.
*Garratt et al and the Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Health
and Long-term Care) P-2003-1670, (O’Neil), 2005 CanLII 53194
(ON PSGB)
To similar effect is the Board’s July 11, 2014 decision in Kaine v Ontario
(Children and Youth Services), 2014 CanLII 48097 (ON PSGB), PSGB # P-2013-
1036.
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[14] For all of the above reasons, the Board finds that the complaint must be
dismissed as beyond its jurisdiction as it relates to the denial of pay for
performance and in respect of its claims for the setting of new terms and
conditions of employment, and as failing to make out a viable case of a breach of
any existing term or condition of employment.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 22nd day of January 2015.
Kathleen G. O’Neil, Chair