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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-1465.Mohamed.92-05-05 ONTARfO EMPLOYES OE LA CO,bW~ CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L 'ONTARiO ....GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSlON DE SETTLEMENT ' REGLEMENT BOARD DES GRIEFS TBO CttlNDAS STREET wEST, SUITE 2100, TORONTO, ONTARIO. MSG lZ8 180, RUE DUNDAS OUE~, BUREAU 21~, TO~O~O ~ONTA~tO}. MSG IZ8 FACStM&E/T~COPlE (416) 326-~396 1465/91 IN T~ ~TTER OF ~ ~IT~TION Un,er T~ CRO~ ~P~YEE5 COLLECTI~ B~G~INING ~CT Befure ~ GRI~CE SETTLE~ BE~EN OPSEU (Mohamed) Gr~ evo r The Crown in Right of Ontario (Mini~t~ of Co.unity & Social Se~ices) Employer BEFO~: M. Gorsky Vice-Chai~erson M. Vorster Me. er. ~. O'Toole Me.er FOR THE M. McFadden GRIEVOR Counsel Koskie & Minsky Barristers & Solicitors FOR THE S. Mason EMPLOYER Counsel Legal Services Branch Ministry of Community & Social Services HEARING February 4. 1992 D F. C I S I ON The grievance dated June 24, 1991 states: I am discriminatorily and improperly placed on the salary grid in my position as a Community Development Officer 2. The settlement desired states: That I be properly classified and placed (that is at the maximum rate for my classificationt on the salary grid retroactively with interest effective April 1, 1991. Counsel for the Union indicated that no claim was being made for a different classification and t~at the only settlement desired related to the request for placement at the maximum rate for the Grievor's classification on the salary grid. At the outset of the hearing counsel for the parties indicated that they had arrived at an agreed statement of facts, to which are attached three appendices which are annexed to this decision as Appendix "A". After filing the agreed statement of facts, the parties indicated that paragraphs four, five and six thereof were to be amended by changing the number"six" to "five" in paragraph four; the numbers "five" and "six" in paragraph six to the numbers "four" and "five" respectively; and the word "sixth," in paragraph seven to the word "fifth." By further agreement, the parties added the following agreed statements of fact: 9. The difference between the Grievor's salary and the salaries of the other employees described above was not due to any differences in merit, ability or work performed. The basis for salary increases for the other employees described above was in accordance with the circumstances set out in . paragraph six herein. 10. Pay equity increases to employees in the Welfare Field worker 2 classification were significantly greater than pay equity increases to employees in. the Community Development Officer 2 classification during the relevant time. The Union does not challenge the propriety of the change in classification of the five Income Maintenace/Handicapped Children's Benefits Officers who were formerly classified as Welfare Field Worker 2's, who, effective April 1, 1991, were assigned to new positions as Special Agreements Officers, classified as Community Development Officer 2's. Nor is there a claim that the Employer behaved in bad faith based on invidious grounds of discrimination as are described in article A.1 of the collective agreement: A.1 There shall be no discrimination practised by reason of race, ancestry, place of origin, cotour~ ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status, family status, or handicap, as defined in section 9(1) of the Ontario Human Rights Code (OHRC). Counsel for the Union argued that sections 18(1)(a) and (b) of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act R.S.O., 1980, Chapter 108 do not address the subject of an employee's placement on the wage grid. The narrow position argued on behalf of the Grievor is that when the five Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits Officers classified as Welfare Field Worker 2's were assigned to new positions as Special Agreement Officers, classified 3 classified as Community Development Officer 2's and were placed at step 6 of the wage grid, it was incumbent on the Employer to place the Grievor at the same level. Counsel for the Union argued that the collective agreement did not address an issue such as the one before us, except in the circumstances set out in article 5. The parts of article 5 referred to by counsel for the Union are: 5.1.1 Promotion occurs when the incumbent of a classified position is assigned to another position in a class with a higher maximum salary than the class of his former position. 5.1.2 An employee who is promoted shall receive that rate of pay in the salary range of the new classification which is the next higher to his present rate of pay, except that: - where such a change results in an increase of less than three percent (3%~, he shall receive the next higher salary rate again, which amount will be considered as a one-step increase; - a promotional increase shall not result in the employee's new salary rate exceeding the maximum of the new salary range except where 'permitted by salary note. 5.1.3 Where an employee: (a) at the maximum rate of a salary is promoted, a new anniversary date is established based upon the date of promotion; (b) at a rate less than the maximum in the 4 salary range is promoted and receives a promotional increase: - greater than a one-step increase, a new anniversary date based on the date of promotion is established; - of one step or less, the existing anniversary date is retained. 5.2,1 When the duties of an employee are changed as a result of reorganization or reassignment of duties and the position is reclassified to a class with a lower maximum salary, an employee who occupies the position when the reclassification is made is entitled to a salary progression based on merit to the maximum salary of the higher classification including any revision of the maximum salary of the higher classification that takes effect during the salary cycle in which the reclassification takes place. 5.2.2 An employee to whom the above section applies is entitled to be appointed to the first vacant position in his former class that occurs in the same administrative district or unit, institution or other work area in the same ministry in which he was employed at the time the reclassification was made. 5.3 Where a position is reassessed and is reclassified to a class with a lower maximum salary, any employee who occupies the position at the time of the reclassification ~ha]l continue to be entitled to salary progression based on merit to the maximum salary of the higher classification, including any revision of the maximum salary of the~ higher classification what takes effect during the salary cycle in which the reclassification takes place. 5.4.1 Where, because of the abolition of a position, an employee is'assigned: . (a) from one position in a ministry to another position in the same ministry, or (b) from a position in one ministry to a position in another ministry, and the position to which he is assigned is in a class with a lower maximum salary than the maximum salary for the class of the position from which he was assigned, he shall continue to be entitled to salary progression based on merit to the maximum salary of the higher classification including any revision of the maximum salary of the higher classification that takes effect during the salary cycle in which the assignment takes place. 5.4.2 Sub-section 5.4.1 applies only where there is no position the employee is qualified for, and that he may be assigned to, and that is: (a) in the same classification that applied to the employee's position before the position was abolished, or (b) in a classification having the same maximum salary rate as the maximum salary rate of the classification that applied to the employee's position before the position was abolished. 5.5 Where, for reasons of health, an employee is assigned to a position in a classification having a lower maximum salary, he shall not receive any salary progression or salary decrease for a period of six (6) months after his assignment, and if at the end of that period, he is unable to accept employment in his former classification, he shall be assigned to a classification consistent with his condition. 5.6 Except as provided above, an employee who is demoted shall be paid at the rate closest to but less than the rate he was receiving at the time of the demotion, effective from the date of his demotion. 5.7 It is understood that where an employee is assigned to a position pursuant to Section 5.4, 5.5 or 5.6, the provisions of Article 4 6 (poSting and Filling of Vacancies or New Positions) shall not apply. 5.8.1 When a new classification is to be created or an existing classification is to be revised, at the request of ~ither party the parties shall meet within thirty (30) days to negotiate the salary range for the new or revised classification, provided that should no agreement be reached between the parties, then the Employer will set the salary range for the new or revised classification subject to the right of the parties to have the rate determined by arbitration. Counsel for the Employer identified articles 5.1.1, 5.1.2 and 5.1.3 as dealing with what happens when an employee is p~omoted. Counsel for the Union also identified articles 5.2.1, 5.2.2, 5.3, 5.4.1, 5.6, and 5.8.1 as dealing with cases where an employee is demoted or has her position reclassified or where the employee is reclassified, and identified article 5.4.2 as a qualifying clause affecting article 5.4.1. Although articles 5.'5 and 5.7 were referred to, it was acknowledged that neither of them affect the determination of the issue before us. Counsel for the Union' argued that there was nothing in article 5, or elsewhere in the collective agreement, that explicitly indicated what was to be done by an employee in an existing classification who felt that she had been improperly placed on the wage grid. Although no cases could be found dealing with the issue 7 before us where the matter had come before the Grievance Settlement Board, it was the position taken on,behalf of the Grievor that if no compelling distinctions could be made between employees within a classification, there was no reason to distinguish between them for pay purposes. As is noted from the agreed statement of facts, counsel for the Union does not argue that the placement on the grid in the case of the Grievor and the five other employees was contrary to the provisions of any part of article 5 and in particular with article 5.1.2 (see paragraphs two and six of the agreed statement of facts). In support of his position, counsel for the Union viewed the Employer as having a discretion to exercise in arriving at the proper placement of an employee on the salary grid.. ~n the absence of any cases directly on point, counsel for the Union referred to the principles in a number of cases involving' the exercise of employer discretion and argued that they had significance in the case before us. Reference was made to the case of Re United Electrical Workers, Local 523, and Union Carbide Canada Ltd. (1967), 18 L.A.C. 109 (P.C. Weiler). The Union Carbide ease was a job posting case in which certain junior employees were placed in a millwright job over senior employees who had also applied for the position. 8 Counsel for the Union referred us to the following quotation from pages 117-8 of the Union Carbide case: It should be noted that this does not mean (as the company appeared to advocate in its brief) that the employer's responsibility to decide on employee ability and qualifications is untrammelled and completely un- reviewable. Rather, the company's decision must be non- discriminatory, and subject to the terms of the contract (including the seniority clause) in two senses: first, the judgement of the company must be honest, and un- biased, and not actuated by any malice or ill will directed at the particular employee, and second, the managerial decision must be reasonable, one which a reasonable employer could have reached in the light of the facts available. The underlying purpose of this interpretation is to prevent the arbitration board taking over the function of management, a position which it is. said they are manifestly incapable of filling~ Yet the managerial discretion to decide has been limited by the terms of the agreement and it is the duty of the arbitration board to ensure that it is exercised in the light of proper principles and criteria, that all relevant considerations have been adverted to, and that all irrelevant factors have been excluded from the process of decision. In the Unign Carbide case, the employer had imposed on it a discretfon to assess the ability and qualifications of employees in a promotion contest. In the case before us there is no question of imposing a limitation on the Employer's discretion in placing an employee on the salary grid, because there is no discretion to be exercised in following the provisions of article 5. Counsel for the Union also referred to another case before a board chaired by Professor wailer; Re Sudbur¥ Mina, Mill and Smelter WQrkers' Union and Falconbridge Nickel Mines Ltd. (1969), 20 L.A.C. 45. In the Falconbridge case, the grievor claimed that 9 he had been elevated to the position of painter on a temporary basis but had been only paid at his normal classification rate as a repairman. Counsel for the Union referred to the statement of the board found at page 50: One of the main purposes of a wage classification system, particularly if supplemented by a specific temporary assignment provision as here, is to create uniformity and equality in payments for the same kind of work. It is simply unfair for two employees who are doing the same kind of work, perhaps even working together, to be paid substantially different rates where no differencas in skill are exhibited. Hence the presumption must be that the range or family of tasks associated with different jobs, carrying different wage rates, should be mutually exclusive as far as is practicable (for purposes of payment, not assignment). The position taken on behalf of the Grievor was that as there were no differences in the work done or level of skill of the Grievor and that of the other five employees similarly classified, there should be no difference in their placement on the salary grid. It was submitted that once the Grievor requested that she be placed on the same level on the salary grid as the other five employees, then it was unreasonable to maintain the difference in the placement on the grid between the Grievor and the other employees who were doing the same kind of work where there were no other differences which warranted the disparity. In the ~alconbrid~e case there was no provision such as article 5.1.2 in the case before us that represents the parties agreement as to what is to be done" in the circumstances there described. 10 Counsel for the Union also relied on Re Ontario Human Rights Commission et al. and Simpsons-Sears Ltd. (1985), 23 D.L.R. (4th) 321 (S.C.C.). The Simpsons-Sears case dealt with an alleged violation of the Ontario Human Rights Code, where it was held that an employment rule honestly made for sound economic or business reasons, equally applicable to all to whom it. is intended to apply, may be discriminatory under the Code if it treats one group of employees differently because of some special characteristic which they possess: The Code aims at the removal of discrimination. This is to state the obvious. Its main approach, however, is not to punish the discriminator, but rather to provide relief for the victim of discrimination. It is the result or the effect of the action complained of which is significant. If it does, in fact, cause discrimination; if its effec~ is to impose on one person or group of persons obligations, penalties, or restrictive conditions not imposed on other members of the community, it is discriminatory. (at p.329) To take the narrower view and hold that intent is a required elemeht of discrimination under the Code would seem to me to place a virtually insuperable barrier in the way of 'a complainant seeking a remedy. (at p.331) ~ounsel for the Union argued that it is irrelevant.that there was no intention on the part of the Employer to discriminate between the Grievor and the other employees. The question ought to be: was there an unwarranted distinction between the Grievor and the other employees? In the case before us, the alleged discrimination is the result.of the application of the agreement between the parties and does not represent the unilateral decision of the Employer. Counsel for the Union also relied upon re Chrysler Canada Ltd. and United Automobile Workers, Local 444 (1986), 23 L.A.C. (3d) 366 (Kennedy). In the Chrysler case, the grievor, a member of the Seventh Day Adventist church, refused to work on any Friday night and Saturday shifts, this refusal being in keeping with a basic tenet of his church. The legitimacy and bona fides of the grievor's religious convictions were not challenged. After various efforts had been made .to accommodate him within the company's existing scheduling practices and procedures, there were several instances where this could not be done and on those occasions he was absent without permission for scheduled shifts on Friday night and Saturday. After progressive discipline based on these absences, he was dismissed. .The union relied on an argument based on the adverse effects of discrimination rather than intentional discrimination, and relied on the Simpsons-Sears case, arguing that: Within the rationale of that decision the company was Qbliged to take reasonable steps to accommodate the grievor's shift requirements short of undue hardship in the operation of its business and that the company had not done so. It was submitted that: ... past attempts at accommodation had not included any hardship or expense to the company, and the evidence indicated that the company could accommodate the grievor's needs without undue hardship, (at. p.373) The arbitrator concluded, at p.378, that: Discrimination within the language of article 4 of the collective agreement [before] would include adverse 12 effect discrimination as analyzed by the supreme Court of Canada in [the Simpsons-Sears case] and that the company could accommodate the grievor without undue expense or hardship. The company must exercise its right of management and its application of the collective agreement between the parties in a manner tha~ is consistent with the Human Rights Code, 1981 and the provisions of the Code were not complied with in the scheduling of the grievor .... In the case before us, the "discrimination" ag~nst the grievor was a result of an agreement between the parties, and it is not inconsistent with any statutory obligation imposed on the Employer. .In summarizing his position, counsel for th~ Grievor argued that the purpose of the grid was to recognize distinctions between employees within a classification. Placement of the Grievor at a step below the other five employees, it was submitted, represented a distinction not based on any fact relevant to job considerations. We were asked to find that there had been a breach of the administration of the wage grid because of the improper exercise of discretion on the part of the Employer in failing to act reasonably on the evidence before it. That is, having found no distinguishing feature between the Grievor's position and that of the other employees, it was unreasonable to distinguish her situation from the others by placing her one step below them on the salar, y grid~ Notwithstanding the ingenious arguments of counsel for the Grievor, the principles enunciated in the cases cited by him have no application to article 5 for the reasons set o~t above. While it is easy to see why the Grievor would regard the distinction that 13 exists between herself and the other employees relative to their placement on the salary grid as being invidious, this is not a case where some discretionary choice must be made by the Employer in deciding where an employee who has been promoted within the meaning of article.5.1.1, is to be placed on the salary grid. This is not a case where the Employer has an untramme]led right free from review to place an employee on the salary grid as it chooses provided it has acted in good faith. Nor is this a case where the employer, as in the Union Carbide case, must make a choice under the collective agreement relying on relevant evidence, ignoring irrelevant evidence, which decision must be made, not only in good faith, but in a way that stands up to the test of reason. Where an employee winds up on the grid is a function of the' mechanical application of article 5.1.2. The mere existence of such a provision opens up the door to distinctions which may disadvantage an employee. What happened in this case is set out in paragraph 10 of the agreed statement of facts: "Pay equity increases to the welfare Field Worker 2 position were significantly greater than pay equity increases to the Community Development Officer 2 position during the relevant time period." As counsel for the Employer pointed out, the placement of an employee on a wage grid is not solely dependent on merit or experience. Article 5 says that the placement on the grid also 14 depends on the employee's previous salary prior to promotion~ The placement on the grid may be the result of fortuitous events. For example, two persons promoted to the same job at the same time where neither of them has experience on that job could be paid different amounts based on their previous position where their two jobs were paid at disparate rates. What has happened in this case is that the r~su]t was dictated by the application of the clear language of article 5 which the parties ~egotiated and which result was a necessary consequence of such application. As a result of a decision arrived at by the Employer and the Union, the pay equity adjustment of the Welfare Field Worker 2 and Community Developmen~ Officer 2 positions were different. This resulted in the other five employees being transferred to the Community Development Officer 2 classification with a higher placement on the salary grid. In performing its function, the Employer was not exercising any discretion and the language of article 5 cannot be seen as imposing on it the obligation to exercise a discretion or to afford it any discretion in placing an employee on the salary grid. Nor is there any other provision, of the collective agreement, as was acknowledged, that did so and there cannot be any abstract obligation to create a fair result in the absence of reliance upon some provision in the collective agreement that imposes such a burden. The wage grids and an employees placement thereon have been 15 established through negotiation and agreement. Any apparent anomaly said to exist in this case can only be remedied through agreement. In the absence of such agreement, the seeming anomaly in which the Griever is caught cannot be resolved by this Board. Accordingly, although we sympathize with the Griever's position, %he grievance must be denied. Dated at Toronto this 5th. day of May, < 1992. M. Gorsky Vice Ch rperson ~~'~ Addendum attached M. Vorster - Member Member ADDENDU_M BY UNION NOMINEE - MFNNO VORSTER 0~o_ P~blk: Servic~ EoTpI~ Uoion and ~h~ Mioistl;y c~ Community Grievance of Moharned While it may not be within the jurisdiction of the Grievance Settlement Board to correct what is an obvious injustice, it is certainly within the authority of the employer to act in fair and just manner to an employee it values enough to promote. The fads of this case make the unfairness to the grievor clear to even the most casual observer. The grievor was one of six employees in her group of Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits Officers. She alone was promoted to the position of Special Agreements Officer 2. The grievor went from the top of her existing pay grid to the starting grid p{acement in her new classification. Since the collective agreement requires that there be an increase of at least 3% in her salary upon promotion, she received the latter amount. Almost three years later, her former fellow workers were reclassified from Benefits Officers to the grievor's position of Special Agreements Officer. Because the reclassified employees were at the maximum of their pay grid, they received the maximum wage in their new position. In other words, by now making less than her former fellow. · employees, she would have been better off by not being promoted at all. The Provincial Government's classification system and wage grids have been constructed by the employer so as to most accuratety reflect the way in which it considers it's employees interrelate' in terms of job duties and resulting wages, in making the decision to t~eat the 9rievor with disdain, 'the employer has made a mockery of its own classification system. This grievance should never have come before us. What the employer has won on a technicality it has lost in the respect of its employees. Respectfully submitted, Menno Vorster APPENDIX "A" GSB No. 1465/91 BETWEEN: OPSEU (S. MOHAMED) Grievor - and - Ministry of Community and Social Services 'Employer AGREED STATEMENT OF FACT~ 1. Effective May 2, 1988, the grievor was promoted from the position of Handicapped Children's Benefits Officer (classified as Welfare Field Worker 2) to Special Agreements Officer 2 (classified as Community Development officer 2). She remained in the latter position until the grievance was filed on June 24, 1991. 2. Before the promotion, the grievor was.paid $628.73 per week, whic~ was the highest step in the WFW2 salary range. UDon promotion, her salary increased to $664.01 per week, which was the lowest step in the CDO2 salary range. The parties agree. that this salary increase was in accordance with the "3% rule" in Article 5.1.2 of the Collective Agreement. 3. The ~grievor received the following salary increases between the date of the promotion and the date of the grievance (as shown in her Employee Service Record, which is attached as Appendix A) January l, 1989 - annual' revision to $703.12/wk. May 1, 1989 - merit increase to $726.08/wk. December 31, 1989 - pay equity adjustment to $72S.26/wk. January 1, 1990 - annual revision to $774.87/wk. May 1, 1990 - accelerated merit increase (2 steps) to'$826.64/wk. December 31, 1990 - pay equity adjustment to $836.43 January 1, 1991 -. annuaI revision to $884.94/wk. May 1, 1991 - merit increase to $922.23/wk. 4. Effective April 1, 1991, the Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits and Special Services at Home programs were amalgamated. As a result, Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits officers (classified as Welfare Field Worker 2) were reassigned to new positions as Special Agreements Officers (classified as Community Development Officer 2). 5. The employer and the union agreed that these reassigned employees would be compensated according to the promotional rules in Article 5 of the Collective Agreement (see employer's letter of March 20, 1991, and union reply of March 26, 1991, attached to this statement as Appendix B). 6. ~ of these s~ employees were earning $911.54/wk. at the top step of the WF2 salary range-before reassignment. After reassignment, they earned $960.31/wk. at the top step of the CD02 range. The parties agree that this increase was in accordance with the "3% rule" in Article 5.1.2. 7. The s~xth employee was on an acting assignment as a social Worker 2 before reassignment. Her salary was increased from $880.00/wk. to~$960.31/wk. (the highest step ih the CDO2 range) due to a clerical error. The error was later rectified and her salary was adjusted to $922.23/wk. (the second highest step). The parties agree that, apart from the temporary impact of'the clerical error, this increase was in accordance with Article 5.1.2. 8. The relevant salary schedules for Welfare Fieldworker 2 and Community Development officer 2 are attached as Appendix C. (~ Community a.o Se[vices sociaux Social Se[¥ice$ et communau~ai~es Ontario Toronto Bureau 2195 Yonge Street 21§5, rue Yonge Area de secteur Torot~tOo Ontario Toronto [OnterioJ Office de Toronto M7A 1G1 MTA 1G1 Mrs. Carol Deschamps ' March 20, 1991 OPSEU Staff Representative Queen's Park Office .300-56 Wellesley Street West Toronto, Ontario M5$ 2S3 Dear Mrs, Deschamps: Re: Amalgamation of Income Maintenance/handicapped Children's Benefits and Special Services at Home Progr, ams This will confirm the discussions of Our meeting on January 30, 1991 regarding the proposed amalgamation of the above-noted programs. In attendance were Miss Esther Kulman, Manager of Human Resources and the undersigned. In accordance with our agreement, the following principles, will be used to accomplish the transaction: 1. The amalgamation of the positions of Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits. 9fflcer and the Special Agreements Officer will be treated as a reorganization. 2. The reorganization wiil result in the creation of four Special Agreements Officer positions in the Special Services Un~t; four Income Maintenance Officer positions in the Local Offices; and'the abolishment of eight Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits Officer positions. 3. The position of Special Agreements Officer carries the classification of Community Development Officer 2, Atypical. 4. In order of their seniority, the CUrrent full-time permanent incumbents of the Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Bener-~cs Officer positions are: 2G2B 102/89; 5. An offer'of reassignment to the new positions of Special Agreements Officer will be made on the b.asis of seniority to the' current full-time permanent incumbents. 6. Those employees who agree to the reassignment to the pos~on of Special Agreements Officer will be compensated according to the promotional rules established.by Article 5 of the Collective Agreement. 7. ThOse employees that decline reassignment or to whom an offer of reassignment is not made will be transferred laterally to a vacant Income MaJntenanc~ Officer position which carries the same classification as their previous position. We would like your written concurrence to the principles described above before implementing the reorganization. -A reply by March 25, 1991 would be appreciated. It should be noted that any challenge to the preceding conditions may cause Management to reconsider its reorganizational strategy. Thank you for taking the time to ensure that OPSEU's concerns were incorporated into our plan. Andre lannu'zzie[lo Jack Ray- Manager, Income and Family Support Manager, Services to the Disabled /.. ' ~pendix B · 'Ontario ?ublicServic Emplouees Union ....... .. March 26, 1991 pY COURIER Mr. Andre Iannuzziello Manager, Income and Family Support Ministry 9f Community and Social Services 2195 Yonge Street Toronto, Ontario M7AjGI Dear Mr. Iannuzziello: Re: Amalgamation of Income Maintenance/Handicapped Children's Benefits and Special Services at Home Proqrams In response to your letter of March gO, 1991, this correspondence will.serve to confirm that we are in concurrence with the principles as outlined'~n your letter to be used,to facilitate the amalgamation of the positions as outlined above. We understand that receipt of this'letter is essential before implementation occurs, but at the same time would like to hear back from you as to dates when we could expect the amalgamation to occur. In response to your statement, "any challenge may cause management to reconsider its reorganizational strategy",-I can advise you that at this time we have not heard of an~ plans wMch would challenge this agreement. Let me take this opportunity to thank you'for taking our mutual concerns into. consideration in the development of this plan. Yours truly, Carolyn 'Desch. amps Staff Representative CD:las Queen's Park Olfice, 56 Wellesley Slre(:l West. S,,ile300. Toron[o. Or, tar,o M5S 2S3 Phone 904-11IG - / The Provincial Government's classification system and wage grids have been constructed by the employer so as to most accurately reflect the way in which it considers it's empioycc~ interrelate in terms of job duties and resulting wages. In making the decision to treat the grievor with disdain, the employer has made a mockery of its own classification system. This grievance should never have come before us. What the employer has won on a technicaJity it has lost in the respect of its employees,. Respectfully submitted, Menno Vorster