HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-3790.Thomas.15-05-29 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# 2013-3790, 2013-3898, 2013-3899, 2013-3900
UNION#2014-0229-0002, 2013-0271-0003, 2013-0271-0004, 2013-0271-0005
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Thomas) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Daniel Harris Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION David Wright
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING May 25, 2015
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Decision
The Issue
[1] There are four grievances before me filed by OPSEU on behalf of the grievor,
Terrence Thomas. The grievor is a Corrections Officer with the employer, the
Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services. This decision deals with
one of the grievances. The union has brought a motion in the nature of an
application for summary judgment. It says that, based on the facts agreed to by
the employer, there's a demonstrated breach of minutes of settlement.
[2] The minutes of settlement relied upon were entered into on January 28, 2011.
That agreement settled a large number of grievances brought on behalf of Mr.
Thomas.
[3] For the purposes of this motion, the parties have agreed upon the following
Statement of Fact:
For the purposes of a motion being brought by the union on May 25, 2015,
the parties agree to the following facts:
1. The parties entered into a Memorandum of Settlement dated
January 28, 2011 (copy attached as Appendix 1);
2. Pursuant to the terms of that Settlement, the Grievor commenced a
temporary assignment as a Probation and Parole Officer in the
Halton Probation and Parole Office on January 31, 2011;
3. The Grievor remained in that position in that office through to
November 24, 2013 when, pursuant to a letter dated November 12,
2013 (copy attached as Appendix 2) he was returned to his "home"
position as a CO2 and was assigned to the Ontario Correctional
Institute;
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4. The Grievor did not attend any courses at the Correctional Services
College after 2011. However, the Grievor and Ministry entered into
a Training Plan for the Grievor in November 2011 which was
scheduled to continue until March 2012;
5. During the period from January 31, 2011 to November 24, 2013 the
Grievor performed the functions of a Probation and Parole Officer.
[4] The portions of the memorandum of settlement that are relevant include
paragraphs 1, 2, 4 and 5, which read as follows:
1. Upon receipt of sufficient medical documentation certifying that Mr.
Thomas is fit to perform the core duties of the position, the Employer
agrees to place Mr. Thomas on a temporary assignment as a Probation
and Parole Officer at the Halton Probation and Parole Office effective
January 31, 2011. Pending the receipt of this medical documentation, Mr.
Thomas shall remain on sick leave in accordance with his Short Term
Sickness credits.
2. The Employer agrees that the above noted assignment will be for a period
of twelve (12) months’ duration and throughout this period Mr. Thomas will
be required to successfully complete all outstanding requirements of the
Probation and Parole Basic Training Program, as available within the
twelve (12) month assignment, and satisfactorily perform all job
requirements of the Probation and Parole Officer position. If the
Correctional Services College, for reasons beyond Mr. Thomas’ control,
does not offer the required training courses within the twelve (12) month
time frame, Mr. Thomas will be afforded the opportunity to remain in the
temporary assignment until the opportunity to complete those courses
becomes available.
. . .
4. It is understood between the parties that if Mr. Thomas meets all training
and job-related requirements as set out in paragraph (2) above at the end
of the twelve month temporary assignment set out in paragraphs (1) and
(2) above, Mr. Thomas’ home position will be transferred to a full-time
Probation and Parole Officer position at the Halton Probation and Parole
Office.
5. It is understood between the parties that if Mr. Thomas does not meet all
the requirements set out in paragraph (2) above during his 12 month
temporary assignment, upon (2) weeks notice he will return to a position
as a Correctional Officer at the Toronto W. Detention Centre.
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[5] The union submitted that the only provision in the minutes of settlement providing
for an extension of the 12 month term is found in paragraph 2. That is, if the
required training courses were not available to the grievor within the 12 month
period he would remain in the temporary assignment until the opportunity to
complete those courses became available. It said that the agreed statement of
facts here does not assert that he could not have taken those courses in that
timeframe. Accordingly, there could be no extension to the 12 month period. The
union submitted that the effect of this was that at the expiration of the 12 month
period, the grievor was either to be made permanent in the position or returned to
his home position of Correctional Officer. It said the grievor stayed in the position
for approximately 21 months, almost twice the period contemplated by the
minutes of settlement. It said by doing so the employer must be deemed to have
accepted that the grievor was permanent in the position. It said that it was not
open to the employer to purport to exercise the two-week notice provision in
paragraph 5 some 22 months after he started in the position.
[6] The union likened this situation to that of a probationary period. Not that the
grievor was on probation, as that term is known to the collective agreement, but
with respect to the sanctity or rigidity of the contemplated period. That is, if a
probationary employee is kept beyond the probationary period, even for as short
as a day or two, the probationary period has passed and the employee has all of
the rights under the collective agreement of a permanent employee. The union
relied upon the following authorities: Re Canada Post Corporation and Canadian
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Union of Postal Workers (1983), 11 L.A.C. (3d) 90 (P. Picher) and Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation and N.R.P.A., Re (1991), 22 L.A.C. (4th) 40 (Burkett).
[7] The employer submitted that the entire agreement set out in the minutes of
settlement must be taken in context. The minutes of settlement settled a large
number of grievances, the purpose of which was to give the grievor an
opportunity to move out of the operational side of the ministry into the community
side. It did not immediately move his home position. He was required to meet the
same standards as any Probation and Parole Officer. It said that meeting these
standards was a condition precedent to the grievor remaining in the Probation
and Parole Officer position. It submitted that the Board would need to hear
evidence of whether or not the grievor met the standard required to permit him to
stay in the position. It agreed that the grievor's “Training Plan” did go beyond the
anticipated 12 month end date of the minutes of settlement.
[8] The employer also relied upon the canon of construction that all words have to
be given meaning. It said that all of paragraph 5 must have a purpose, including
the requirement that the grievor be given two weeks notice of his return to his
home position as Correctional Officer. The employer submitted that the language
of the minutes of settlement does not require them to decide at the 12 month
point whether the grievor is to stay in the position or return to his home position.
Giving meaning to the two-week notice provision in paragraph 5 was said to lead
to the conclusion that the grievor might overstay the 12 month period and be
returned to his home position upon two weeks notice if he had not met the
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standards of the Probation and Parole Officer position. The employer relied upon
excerpts from Brown and Beatty found at paragraphs 4:2120 and 4:2151.
[9] In reply, the union submitted that if this grievance were heard on its merits there
would be a factual dispute as to whether or not the grievor met the requirements
of the position. It said that its interpretation of the minutes of settlement takes into
account both the whole agreement and gives meaning to all of the words in the
agreement. It said that paragraphs 1, 2, 4 and 5 require the employer to make an
assessment. It said paragraphs 4 and 5 sitting together provide that should the
employer decide within the 12 month period that the grievor has not met the
standards he would receive two weeks notice of his return to his home position. It
said that both paragraphs 4 and 5 refer back to paragraph 2. The employer had a
year to make its decision, and since the grievor did not go back to his home
position, he must be taken to be permanent in the Probation and Parole Officer
position.
Reasons for Decision
[10] The thrust of the union’s submissions is that paragraphs 4 and 5 of the minutes
of settlement set out an algorithmic either/or scenario. That is, either the grievor
meets all of the requirements set out in paragraph 2 within the twelve-month
period, and his home position becomes that of a Probation and Parole Officer, or
he does not meet all of the requirements set out in paragraph 2 within the twelve-
month period and the employer must return him to his home position as a
Correctional Officer. It says that because the employer did not return the grievor
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to his home position the grievor must be deemed to have met the requirements
of paragraph 2, and he should be declared permanent in the Probation and
Parole Officer position. I do not agree with this submission because it requires
that language be added to paragraphs 4 and 5. Nowhere did these paragraphs
say that the end of the 12 month period is a bright line at which point one of the
two options must be exercised. Indeed, the union calls for the insertion of a
deeming provision, whereby the failure of the employer to require the grievor to
return to his home position leads, by implication, to the conclusion that they have
agreed that the requirements of paragraph to have the net. This would require in
addition to the language of the minutes of settlement beyond the words that were
chosen by the parties. It is the words chosen that provide insight into the parties’
intentions.
[11] Further, both paragraph 4 and paragraph 5 refer back to paragraph 2 and speak
in terms of whether or not “all training and job-related requirements” set out in
paragraph 2 have been met. All I have before me at this juncture are the agreed
facts, which are agreed to only for the purpose of this motion. It is agreed that the
employer and the grievor entered into a "Training Plan". On its face, that is not
the same as the "Probation and Parole Basic Training Program", pursuant to
paragraph 2, the outstanding requirements of which must be successfully
completed by the grievor within the 12 month period. At this juncture, it is not an
agreed fact that those requirements have been met or that the grievor has
satisfactorily performed all of the job requirements of the position. I agree with
the employer that these are conditions precedent to the grievor being placed in
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the position or, in their absence, he be removed from the position pursuant to
paragraphs 4 and 5 of the minutes of settlement. In the absence of agreement
between the parties that these conditions have been met, paragraph 4 is not
triggered. Further, the last sentence of paragraph 2, looking at the minutes of
settlement as a whole, in my view are not intended to be the only basis upon
which the grievor may stay in the position for more than 12 months. It is a failsafe
for the benefit of the grievor. If the required training courses had not been offered
in the 12 month period, this part of paragraph 2 protected the grievor from
circumstances beyond his control.
[12] Turning again to paragraph 4, there are no facts before me to establish that the
grievor met all the specific training and job-related requirements set out in
paragraph 2 by the end of the 12 month temporary assignment set out in
paragraphs 1 and 2. Accordingly, there are no facts upon which I can find that
the grievor's home position should be transferred to a full-time Probation and
Parole Officer position at the Halton Probation and Parole Office.
[13] Turning again to paragraph 5, there is no evidence before me that the grievor did
not meet all of the requirements set out in paragraph 2. There is also no bar to
the grievor being kept in the temporary assignment on an extended basis,
provided if and when he fails to meet the requirements of paragraph 2, he was
given two weeks notice of his return to his home position.
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[14] Whether the grievor did or did not meet all of the requirements set out in
paragraph 2, in the absence of agreement at this stage are facts in issue to be
tried.
Decision
[15] Accordingly, for the reasons given above, the union's motion that the Board
declare that the grievor’s home position is that of a Probation and Parole Officer
at the Halton Probation and Parole Office is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 29th day of May 2015.
Daniel Harris, Vice-Chair