HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-0715.Moses.91-11-27 ONTARIO EMP~.O¥~:S DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPL 0 YEE$ OE L 'ONTA RIO
GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSlON DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE P.*rO0, TORONTO, ONTARR~. M5G ?Z8 TELE~'HO~E/TEL.~HONE. (416) 325- r388
150, RUE [~UNDAS GUEST, BUREAU 2~00, TORONTO (ONTARIO]. MSG tZ8 FACSIM~LE,'TELECOP~E . (4 ~6) ~25- ~396
715/89
IN THE M~TTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EHPLOYEE$ COLLECTIVE BARGAINING &CT
Before
THE gRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT,BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Moses)
Grievor
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Consumer & Commercial Relations)
Employer
B~FORE: A. Barrett Vice-Chairperson
T. Browes-Bugden Member
A. Stapleton Member
FOR THE E. Bessner
GRIEVOR Counsel
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE P. Jarvis
EMPLOYER Counsel
Hicks, Morley, Hamilton, Stewart & Storie
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE J, Spanos
INCUMBE~qT: CorPorate Services Section
Ministry of Consumer & Commercial Rel'ations
HEARING October 23, 25, 1990
March 4, 1991
This is a job competition grievance for a bilingual
position framed as follows:
"I was not called for an interview for the position cf
an Examiner OAG 10 File CR 278. I am familiar with all
the requirements and deal with all aspects of the Acts
in my present position. I feel I was qualified and it
was unfair that ! did not Get an interview.
Settlement desired:
That I be given the position of Examiner OAG 10 File CR-
278.
Dated: April 26, 1989."
As a result of this grievance Ms. Moses was given an
interview for the job and a French test to determine her level of'
proficiency in that language. A stated qualification for the
position was Advanced French language skills. On the French test
she was assessed at the Intermediate level, which means that she
can ask and answer simple questions on familiar topics and handle
simple situations or transactions, but cannot narrate and describe
in the past and future tenses, or handle a complicated situation
or transaction. The tester predicted that it would take Ms. Moses
600 hours of instruction to reach the Advanced level. On her
interview, in English, Ms. Moses was rated sixth out of the eight
candidates.
The position is titled Examiner (Bilingual) in the
Companies Branch, and the duties of the incumbent are to examine
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applications for Letters Patent, and for Extra-Provincial Licences,
Articles of Incorporation. fundamental change documents, and
supporting docUments to ensure their conformity to the.provisions
of the Corporations Act, the Extra-Provincial Corporations Act, and
the Business Corporations Act, Branch policy and practice, to
authorize the issuance of incorporations, amendments, licences, and
corrected certificates, and to provide services and information to
client group in Engl.ish and French, as required.
The skills and knowledge required for the position set
out on the position specification are as follows:
"Sufficient to perform on a paralegal level in the
interpretation and application.of the Corporations Act,
the Extra-Provincial Corporations Act, and the Business
Corporations Act, to permit the incumbent to provide
consultative and evaluative services' to lawyers,
businessmen, M.P.P.'s, police authorities, and the
general public in explaining the requirements' and
processes under this legislation, and in app!yin~ the
legislation for decision-making purposes.
General knowledge of other legislation administered by
the Companies Branch, and the policies, procedures, and-
p~ocesses used by the Branch. Ability to explain orally,
or in writing using legal terminology, or general
terminology, depending upon the specific focus of the
response, requirements of specific sections of the above
Acts, or the regulations, procedures, optional approaches
available to the client, exception to the rule, etc. in
English 'and French. Strong oral/written communication
skills in both languages. Proven experience in
effectively dealing with the public."
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Ms. Mos~s complains that she was only granted an
interview after Julie SDanos had been awarded the job, and after
the filinG of the grievance, and that she should have been granted
an ~nterview in the first place along with the other seven
candidates selected for interviews. She ~aid that her Derzonne!
file was not looked at, nor were her references checked, and she
was not really given a fair chance at the job. The late interview
was perfunctory, and the incumbent was awarded the job (albeit on
an "acting" basis) before she was even given a French test.
With respect to her French abilities, the griever says
that althouqh the job is designated as bilingual under the French
Language Services Act, 1986, there is really very little need to
use French on the job. About 80 percent of the clientele are
English-speaking members of the legal community in Toronto,
although the office serves the entire province and has a reciprocal
arrangement with Quebec as well.
Ms. Moses was pre-screened out of the job competition and
not greater.an interview initially because it was felt her French
language skills were insufficient and did not meet the Advanced
level requirement. Ms. Moses' application for the job did not
reveal that she had ever worked in the French language, and the
only indication of her French ability was a notation under the
heading, "Courses", stating: "Conversational French {presently
enrolled)" Ms. Maio, the supervisor ~f the position, and one of
the three-Derson committee struck to run the competiticn~ knew that
Ms, Moses was attending the same series of French classes
Maio was. M~. Maio knew that Ms. Moses was at the Intermediate
level in the' course, while she ~Ms. Maio) was at the Intermediate
Plus level. Ms. Maio testified that even at her ~ore advanced
level, she could not fulfil the requirements of the position in
French.
Ms. Spanos revealed on her application form that her last
two positions in the Ministry were designated bilingual. After she
scored first on the oral interviewr her personnel file was reviewed
and it was discovered she had a certificate rating her French
language skills at Intermediate P!u$~ dated 1-1/2 years earlier.
It had been the intention of the selection committee to test the
top candidate from the interviews in the French language to ensure
the Advanced level way met prior to awarding the position.
However, the Branch was so Short-staffed that Ms. Maio requested
that Ms, Spanos be~given the job on an acting basim until the~
French temt could be held. The test was held about six weeks later
and Ms. Spanos achieved the Advanced level. She was then confirmed
~n the ~ob.
It is set out {n the job description and was conceded by
all witnesses, includinG the.grievor, that the job r~quires strong
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oral and written communication skills. Ms. Moses also conceded
that she does not hav~ strong skills in French. She ~ee!s.
however~ that she could get by in her dealings with French-speaking
clients because the need would not arise very often.
That reasoning is not in accord with the purpose and
intent of the French Language Serv±ces Act. By that Act people
have a right to deal with designated government offices in French.
If that right is to be a meaningful one the person with whom they
are dealing must be quite fluent in French. If the nature of the
job in question requires strong oral and written communication
skills in English, surely the French-speaking public is entitled
to a similar level of communication.
The employer has the right pursuant to section 18 (1) of
the Crown EmDIoyees Collective Bar~ainin~ Act to set the
qualifications for a job. This discretion is limited in the
arbitral jurisprudence by a requirement that the qualifications be
reasonably related to the job in question. This Board has recently
consldg~ed ~he impact of the French Language Services Act, 1986 on
the issue of whether or not a requirement for Advanced French in
a position designated as bilingual is a reasonable requirement.
(GSB Beck, 196/89; GSB St. Pierre, 1236/89). It should be well-
settled by now that a requirement for Advanced French language
proficiency is reasonably-related to a position designated as
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bilingual under the French Lanqua~e Services kct. Ms. Moses does
not have this advanced proficiency in French and was therefore
properly pre-screened out of the competition.
Any flaws in the competition and interview process are
irrelevant when assessing this grievance. The employer is entitled
to pre-screen applicants who do not have an essential skill,
ability or qualification for a job, and that is what was done here.
The subsequent granting of an interview and a French test after the
filing of the Grievance only confirmed the correctness of the pre-
screening decision.
AccordinGly, the grievance is dismissed.
DATED at Toronto, this 27th day of November, lqql.
SA SARRETT, Vice p on
.... "! Dissent" (dissent_ to follow)
T. BROWES-BUGDEN, Member