HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-0485.Healey.89-06-06 " ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES Of' L'ONTARIO
'~ GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETILEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 oUNDAS STREET WEST. TORONTO, ONTARIO. MSG 1Z8 ~ SUITE 2700 TEI..EPHONE/T~L~:PHONE
fSO. RuE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO) M5G 1Z8 o BUREAU 2;O0 (415) 598o06~8
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between: OPSEU (Healey)
- and - Srlevor
The Grown in Right of Ontarlo
(Ministry of Correctional Services)
Employer
Before: B,B. Fisher V~ce-Chalrperson
?. Klym Member
,~owan Member
APPEARING FOR ?. Lukas~ewlcz
THE GRIEVOR: Counsel
Barristers a Solicitors
~PE~ING FOR S, Lee
THE E~LO~R: Senior Staff Relatlns Officer
Ministry of Correctional Services
HeartnQs: October 27, 1988
November 23, '988
DECISION
The grievor claims that he was unfairly discharged as an unclassified employee
when his contract was not renewed.
The employer raised the usual preliminary objection saying that the Board had
no jurisdiction to hear this matter because of Section 9 of the Public Service Act which
says that upon the expiry of anunclassified employee's contract, he is no longer a Public
Servant.
The parties have agreed that solely for the purpose of determining the
preliminary objection on jurisdiction the Board can assume the following facts to be true.
1. The grievor was an unclassified employee on a one year contract.
2. Shortly before the end of his contractual term, the grievor was unfairly '
disciplined over an incident.
3. The grievor worked until the end of his contract but the contract was not
renewed.
4. The sole reason the grievor's contract was not renewed was because it was as
a disciplinary response to the incident referred to in paragraph 2, and but for
that reason, his contract would have been renewed.
It was agreed by the parties that the Board would not, at this time at teast,
decide this case along the lines of Beresford, Milley and/or Hicks, although it is clear
that the Union reserves its right to raise these cases as additional arguments at a later
time.
The Union's position is simply that the Grievance Settlement Board has the
jurisdiction to inquire into the decision-making process of the employer in deciding not
to renew a contract for an unclassified employee to see if this decision was made in
good faith. If the decision was not made in good faith, then the Union argues the Board
has the jurisdiction to apply the appropriate remedy.
-2-
The employer's position is simply that good faith or lack thereof is irrelevant,
the Board simply has no jurisdiction in a case of simple non-renewal where the employee
was paid to the end of his term.
The Union reli~s on two cases, ltumeniuk (614/84 Vice Chairperson Springate)
and Mousseau (1182/85 Vice Chairperson Jolliffe)
Humeniuk, another non-renewal case, has the following passage at pages
11- 12:
The Minist~,'s failure to renew the ~.'evor's contract was not
a "dismissal". 'Furthe§ in our view, it cannot reasonably be
viewed as a "terrninatton". The word "termination" is used in
both the collective agreement and the grievor's contracts to
refer to situations wfi~fr.e a contract is terminated prior to its
stated expiry date. This was not the case here...i ·
There is nothing in the collective agreement or in the
applicable statutes which guarantees contract employees the
right to be reappointed, or which in any way restricts
man.agement when it makes a decision as to which contract
employees aF. e not to b,e renewed. Accordingly, the non-
renewal pf ttte grievor s contract, which was not tainted by
bad f.aittt on the part of the employer, did not involve a breach
of etttter the collective agreement or a relevant statute.
Mousseau does not talk about "bad faith" but Union counsel relies on the
following passage at page 8:
lf the parties are correct in relying on Boncher and Trumbley
.... as both of them do --- the Board cannot assume
jurisdiction to decide the case on its merits or provide a
remedy unless it has been shown th~ the failure to renew,, Ms.
Mousseau's contract was in .effect a 'dismissal fo. r cause rather
:~. than a mere termination. The employer contends that it was ,
the latter and the Board lacks juns~ diction. The Union's
submission is that tt~e reasons given by the Employer in 1985
demonstrate a dismissalS, om emlgloyment "w~thout just cause"
--- the wordx used in section 18(2)(c) of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act.
-3-
The Ilumeniuk case, including the reference to "bad faith" was commented on
in a later decision entitled Shipley (0223/86.Vice Chairperson Samuels) in the following
passage of page 8:
We are not sure what 'the Board meant when it spoke o[' "bad
faith': in this passage. An unclassified employee has n6
contractual t~ght to renewal of his contract. Why.woul, d~ it
matter if the .failure to renew was "tainted by bad faith
(whatever that would mean in the circumstances)? This Board
simply tins no jurisdiction over non-contractual problems,
except for the three matters mentioned in section 18(2) of the
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act.
This Board accepts the comment in Shipley as binding on this Board in
accordance with the Blake decision, therefore, the presence of bad faith in a decision.
not to renew a contract at its expiry does not give the Board jurisdiction in the matter.
In accordance with the arrangement worked out between the pm'ties, this
grievance is not dismissed because the Union is to be~ allowed 90 days beyond the final
disposition of the Beresford case to request a further hearing of this case to make a
Beresford~type argument, failing which the employer can request, in writing on notice to
the Union, for the grievance to be dismissed.
Dated at TorOnto, this 6~h day of aune ,1989.
er, Vice chairperson
"t '4~ssent" (Dissent attached)
?. Elym, Mer~ber
Cowa~7'vlemOer
DISSENT
I find that I must dissent in this case from the decision of the
majority.
Simply put, I cannot agree clear evidence of bad faith would have
no impact on this Board's right to review how management
administers its rights-in this case the right to renew an
appointment to the unclassified service.
In following the reasoning of the . Shipley decision (0223/86) the
majority have invoked the Blake decision as a reason for
considering Shipley to be binding on this panel. With respect, I
do not consider this to be appropriate. To come to this
conclusion, one would have to completely ignore the reasoning of
the Board in the Humeniuk decision (614/84).
Why is the reasoning in Shipley any more binding on our panel
than the Humeniuk decision? And why was the Shipley panel not
Similarly bound to follow the reasoning in the Humeniuk decision?
It is apparent to me that we are faced with two opposing views
presented by two different panels of the Board, both made before
there was the concern for consistency expressed in the Blake
decision.
we should therefore inspect both decisions carefully and make our
decision on the basis of what is the generally accepted standard
in labour arbitrations and labour relations.
In my opinion a decision that can be interpreted as sanctioning
bad faith in the administration of management rights does not meet
this s~andard. I believe the Grievance Settlement Board should
not place itself in a position where' it can possibly be perceived
as sanctioning bad faith.
I would have dismissed ~he preliminary objection.
Peter Klym