HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-4050.Masliwec.16-09-02 Decision
Crown 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#2014-4050, 2015-2079, 2015-2080
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Association of Management, Administrative and
Professional Crown Employees of Ontario
(Masliwec) Association
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Environment and Climate Change/
Ministry of Education/Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care) Employers
BEFORE Gordon F. Luborsky Vice-Chair
FOR THE
ASSOCIATION
Kelly Doctor
Goldblatt Partners LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Caroline Cohen
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
CONFERENCE CALL August 24, 2016
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Decision
[1] The Board has convened a second telephone conference at the request of the
Association to address a production issue in the context of three job posting
grievances scheduled to be heard by the Board on October 31, 2016.
Agreed Facts
[2] The general background is set out in the Board’s Decision of May 12, 2016
[reported at 2016 CanLII 48161 (ON GSB)], which need not be repeated. The
immediate dispute is related to the grievance at the Ministry of Health and Long-
Term Care (GSB #2015-2080).
[3] As noted in the Board’s earlier Decision, Association counsel delivered the
following e-mail communication to Employer counsel on April 13, 2016
concerning production demands in advance of the hearing:
I have reviewed the documents that you provided. I would note that the
documents provided did not include any of the following:
- the notes from the interview of the other candidates;
- the CVs and cover letters of the other candidates;
- the written assignments of the other candidates;
- scoring grids or documents related to how to score the written
assignment;
- any handwritten notes on the CVs, cover letters, or written
assignments of Ms. Masliwec or the other candidates;
- notes from any reference checks that were performed;
- any other documents in the competition file related to the selection
process involving the other candidates.
We are prepared to limit our request for production at this time to the
5 candidates selected for an interview. Please advise if these
documents will be forthcoming.
[Emphasis added]
[4] Employer counsel’s responding e-mail of April 14, 2016 is reproduced below:
I am aware of what is missing from what I sent you. We are in the process
of tracking down the rest of the material. I thought it would be helpful in
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the meantime to send you what I did have. I do not have any objection
to producing it if she was in fact interviewed. My issue is with your
production request on the other file. Thanks.
[Emphasis added]
[5] The “issue…on the other file” in the Employer’s e-mail refers to the grievance at
the Ministry of Education (GSB#2015-2079), for which the Grievor was not
granted an interview and was the subject of the first Decision. A new matter is
now raised by the Association concerning disclosure of documentation related to
the grievance at the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, in the following
factual circumstances stipulated by counsel.
[6] The Grievor was one of some 37 applicants for the vacancy at that Ministry and
was selected as one of five candidates for an interview to fill the opening. In
deciding whether to grant an interview, the chairperson of the selection panel
pre-screened all of the resumes and covering letters, assigning a specific score
to each based on the information provided that was recorded on a single sheet of
paper. All candidates who scored above a specified threshold were granted an
interview, which in this instance included the Grievor.
[7] Subsequently, in addition to answering oral questions posed by a three-person
selection panel, the five candidates chosen to be interviewed were required to
submit written work, from which the full selection committee came to its decision
on the successful candidate. Subject to checking that candidate’s references,
the Employer confirmed the appointment of the successful candidate, which in
the present case was not the Grievor.
[8] The parties agree the scoring sheet from the pre-screening process was not
referred to in the interviews of the five candidates selected for interviews, nor
was it relied upon in making the ultimate decision not to award the vacancy to the
Grievor.
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The Parties’ Submissions
[9] The Association now requests the scoring sheet for all 37 applicants to the
disputed vacancy at the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Association
counsel submits the Association is entitled to that document because: (a) it is
among the documents Employer counsel supposedly agreed to produce in the
exchange of e-mail correspondence between counsel on April 13 and 14, 2016;
(b) it is said to be “arguably relevant” to the dispute at the Ministry of Health and
Long-Term Care because it may disclose whether the selection committee
properly considered all relevant factors and/or over-emphasized the Grievor’s
performance (or non-performance) during the interview in coming to its final
decision; and (c) in any event, since article 18.6(a) of the collective agreement
(reproduced in the earlier Decision between these parties) empowers the Board
“to determine any question of fact or law including whether any requirement of
Article 18 has been followed”, the Association argues that a conclusion any error
was made at the pre-screening stage may be sufficient to vacate the entire
selection process, requiring the Employer to redo the competition.
[10] The Employer resists the Association’s demand for the production of the pre-
screening score sheet for the following reasons. First, Employer counsel submits
that in her e-mail correspondence of April 14, 2016 she never intended to
consent to the blanket production of all documentation related to the vacancy
competition at the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care; but rather operated on
the premise that only relevant documents related to the five candidates actually
interviewed for the position were being requested by the Association. Second,
the pre-screening score sheet was in the Employer’s submission not arguably
relevant because the Grievor was granted an interview and the ultimate decision
of the full selection committee was made on the basis of the Grievor’s
performance in the interview and on written work that did not involve the pre-
screening score or pre-screening consideration of the candidates. Thus the
Grievor suffered no prejudice even if the pre-screening process was faulty,
according to the Employer. Third, in any event Employer counsel advised that
the single piece of paper on which the pre-screening scores for all applicants was
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recorded has been misplaced. Counsel went on to explain that the person
responsible for safeguarding the competition file has since left the Ontario Public
Service and the fact that this document was missing was not discovered until
after the instant grievances were filed. However, Employer counsel undertook to
continue efforts to locate that misplaced document in the event the Board
required its production.
Decision
[11] Having considered the parties’ representations, the Board has determined it is
not appropriate to grant the Association’s request for an order that the Employer
produce of the pre-screening score sheet, even if it can be located prior to
hearing the merits of the instant grievances.
[12] The Board does not read Employer counsel’s statement in her e-mail of April 14,
2016 that, “I do not have any objection to producing it if she was in fact
interviewed”, to constitute an agreement to produce the pre-screening scoring
sheet. Rather, those words seem to refer only to documentation related to the
five candidates selected to be interviewed for the vacancy, which included the
Grievor.
[13] Given the parties’ stipulation that the score on the pre-screening score sheet was
not referred to or relied upon by the selection committee in making its ultimate
decision on the vacancy at the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, the pre-
hearing disclosure of that score sheet has, in the Board’s opinion, no arguable
relevance to the matters at issue in the grievance respecting that vacancy. It is
only what happened at the interview stage and beyond where the Grievor was
one of the five candidates selected for an interview that the Board considers
relevant to its evaluation of whether the Employer violated the collective
agreement in this instance.
[14] And while it may be correct that the Board has authority under article 18.6(a) of
the collective agreement to determine whether the Employer properly followed all
of the competition provisions set out in Article 18, any finding of a failure in the
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pre-screening stage of the selection process has no bearing on the Grievor’s
particular circumstances. The grievance before the Board is not a general
challenge of the Employer’s pre-screening process, but rather it more narrowly
disputes the Employer’s decision not to select the Grievor as the successful
candidate for the position as one of the five candidates chosen for an interview.
Consequently, whether the pre-screening process complied or didn’t comply with
the requirements of the collective agreement does nothing to advance or
prejudice the Grievor’s challenge of the Employer’s decision in this case.
Disposition
[15] Thus for the foregoing reasons, the Association’s request for an order requiring
the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to produce the pre-screening score
sheet is denied.
[16] The hearing of the three grievances presently before the Board will accordingly
proceed on their merits as originally scheduled.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 2nd day of September 2016
Gordon F. Luborsky, Vice Chair