HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-2297.Thompson.15-10-21 DecisionPublic Service
Grievance Board
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Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2013-2297
UNION#2013-0224-0007
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Thompson) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry) Employer
BEFORE Reva Devins Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Richard Blair
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Robert Fredericks
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING October 7, 2015
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Decision
[1] The Union filed three grievances regarding the interpretation and application of the
Transition Exit Initiative (TEI) in Appendix 46 of the Collective Agreement. There
are also numerous individual grievances that the parties agreed to hold in
abeyance pending the outcome of the Union’s policy grievances.
[2] As a preliminary matter, the Employer brought a motion regarding the availability of
the TEI for fixed terms employees. The parties agreed on the relevant facts that
pertain to this motion as follows:
a. Gladys Thompson filed a grievance on August 9, 2013, alleging that she
was denied her rights under Appendix 46. Ms. Thompson was a part-time,
fixed term employee with the Ministry of Natural Resources. She has now
left the Ontario Public Service, but had four years of continuous service
prior to her departure.
b. Ms. Thompson advised the Employer on February 11, 2013 that she
would not be renewing her contract. She applied for TEI on March 11,
2013 and ceased her employment with the ministry at the end of her
contract on March 27, 2013. On July 18, 2013 she received a verbal
response from her manager advising that she was not eligible for TEI and
that her application was denied.
c. Ms. Thompson did not grieve the conversion of her fixed term status to
that of regular full time employee. The parties further agreed that as a part
time employee, Ms. Thompson did not have any conversion rights under
the collective agreement.
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Appendix 46
[3] The first paragraph of Appendix 46 provides as follows:
All regular, regular part-time and flexible part-time employees will be
eligible to apply to a Transition Exit Initiative (TEI).
Submissions
[4] The Employer maintains that the TEI is restricted to certain categories of
employees and that fixed term employees are not included. Paragraph 1 of the
Memorandum of Agreement set out in Appendix 46 expressly provides who is
eligible to apply, stating “regular, regular part-time and flexible part-time employees
will be eligible”. In the Employer’s submission, an employee must fall within one of
the three enumerated categories to be eligible for the initiative.
[5] The Employer relied on the definitions set out in the collective agreement that
provide for different categories of employment: regular employee, fixed term
employee, regular part-time employee, seasonal employee and flexible part-time
employee. In the Employer’s submission, distinctions based on an employee’s
status are made throughout the collective agreement, with various provisions
setting out to which category of employee it applies and that an Arbitrator has no
authority to amend the agreement to extend benefits to a category of employee
that is not otherwise included.
[6] The Employer also maintained that the specific entitlements provided under the TEI
further demonstrate that it is not intended to apply to fixed term employees as it
refers to benefits, such as vacation credits and termination payments, that are not
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available to them. Finally, the Employer referred to an explanatory note sent to all
employees that was prepared in consultation with the Union. The note confirms
that only regular, regular part-time and flexible part-time employees are eligible to
apply for TEI and that fixed term, seasonal, students and former public servants
are not eligible.
[7] The Union acknowledged that “regular employee” is used as a term of art in this
collective agreement and that Ms. Thompson was, at all times, a fixed term
employee with no conversion rights. In these circumstances, the Union accepts
that technically, on the face of the collective agreement, Appendix 46 does not
apply to Ms. Thompson. Nonetheless, the Union understood that from Ms.
Thompson’s perspective, she thought she was and should be entitled to the TEI.
Decision
[8] The collective agreement includes defined and distinctive categories of
employment status. In this case, both the Employer and the Union agreed that
those definitions are relied upon throughout the collective agreement to distinguish
among employees and that different benefits are, in certain enumerated
circumstances, conferred on employees based on that status.
[9] In this instance, I appreciate that Ms. Thompson, who had worked continuously for
the public service for four years, believed that she was and should be entitled to
the Transition Exit Initiative. Nonetheless, the clear language of Appendix 46 and
the surrounding architecture of the collective agreement do not support her
subjective belief. Paragraph 1 of Appendix 46 sets out who is eligible to apply for
the initiative and only includes regular, regular part time and flexible part time
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employees. The other provisions of Appendix 46 further reinforce the view that it
does not apply to fixed term employees by specifying that if the TEI is granted it will
be provided instead of termination benefits, a benefit that is not available to fixed
term employees in any event. Appendix 46 also provides for the optional
continuance of vacation credits, again, which is inapplicable to fixed term
employees.
[10] Ultimately, both the Employer and the Union accept that there is no provision of the
collective agreement that gives rise to the entitlement Ms. Thompson has
requested. In the absence of any possible violation of the collective agreement, I
agree with the Employer’s submission that I have no jurisdiction to hear Ms.
Thompson’s grievance regarding the denial of her TEI application. I would
therefore grant the Employer’s motion and dismiss the individual grievance filed by
Ms. Thompson on August 9, 2013.
Dated at Toronto this 21st day of October 2015.
Reva Devins, Vice-Chair