HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-1679.Gosse.93-12-21 '*i ", , . ....- , ,,:,~ ':, ONTARIO EMPLOY£S DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES OE [.'ONTARIO
....... GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSION DE
', SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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ZN THE MATTER OF ~/~ ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
· THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Gosse)
Grievor
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General)
Employer
BEFOREt M. Gorsky Vice-Chairperson
M. Lyons Member
M. O'Toole Member
FOR THE M. McFadden
UNION Counsel
Koskie & Minsky
Barristers & Solicitors
POR THE M. Fleishman
EMPLOYER Counsel
Crown Law office - Civil
Ministry of the Attorney General
HEARING February 27, 1992
July 20, 1992
November 3, 1993
' 1
INTERIM DECISION
The Grievances and Backqround
The Grievor, Katherine Gosse, was at all material times a
member of the unclassified service, employed in the Supp0~t &
Custody Order Enforcement Office of the Ministry of the Attorney
General, having the position title of Mail/File Clerk, and was
placed at the OAG 2 classification.
Ms. Gosse had. been employed under five consecutive contracts
of employment in the unclassified service, which are as follows:
1. Exhibit 3, dated March 1, 1990, effective March 6, 1990; with
an expiry date of Ma~ch 31, 1990.
2. Exhibit 4, also dated March 1, 1990, effective from April 1,
1990; with an expiry date of June 30, 1990.
3. Exhibit 5, dated June 21, 1990, with an effective date from
July 1, 1990; with an expiry date of October 31, 1990.
4. Exhibit 7, dated October 8, .1990, with' an effective date
November 1, 1990; with an.expiry date of March 31, 1991.
2
5. Exhibit 8, dated February 1, 1991, having an effective date of
April 10, 199'1; with an expiry date of September 30, 1991.
As part of Part V of each of the contracts, pgragraph (M)
provides: "This contract of empl'oyment may be terminated by either
party~upon giving one week's notice of such intention, otherwise it
will expire on the date specified above."
Exhibit 11 is a letter dated July 8, 1991, addr-essed to Ms~
Gosse, written by Ms. K.A. Beal, shown as Regional Manager of the
Support'and Custody Enforcement 'Branch, Central West Region of the
Ministry of the Attorney General, which letter states:
Please be advised that effective July 9, 1991, you will
not be required to attend work. However you will be paid
up to and including July 19, 1991.
The parties filed with the Board a document in the form of an
agreed statement of facts entitled: "Chronology Re Mail/file
Position," which is as foll0ws:
CHRONOLOGY RE MAIL/FILE POSITION
Jan. 1, 1990 -Mar. 31, i990 Maryann MacDonald was
contracted to assist'
Penny Johnson , the
'. classified mail/file
clerk who was. assigned
part-time to clerk/typist
duties.
Mar. 6, 1990- Mar. 31, 1990 Katherine Gosse was hired
on contract as a
mail/file clerk.
Apr. 1, 1990- Mar. 31, 1991 Ma ryann MacDona ld
c, ontract renewed to
backfill Penny Johnson.
3
Apr. 1, 1990 - Jun. 30, 1990 Katherine Gosse contract
renewed.
Jul. 1, 1990 ~ Oct. 31, 1990 Katherine Gosse contract
renewed.
Oct. 30, 1990 M a i 1 / f i 1 e c 1 e r k
competition posted
(freeze had been imposed
from March 1990).
Nov. 1, 1990 ~ Mar. 31, 1991 Katherine Gosse contract
renewed.
Nov. 30, 1990 Clerk/typist position posted.
Jan. 1991 interviews held for
ma i 1 / f i 1 e · c 1-erk
competition.
Feb. i,. 1991 Katherine Gosse s~gned
mail/file clerk contract
effective April 1, 1991.
Feb. 4, 1991 Penny Johnson.' successful
candidate in clerk/typist
competition. Therefore,
another vacancy existed
for the mail/file clerk
position.
Feb. 18, 1991 Ma r ya nn Ma c Do na 1 d
successful candidate in
ma i I / f i i e c.1 e r k
competition. Katherine
Gosse was an unsuccessful
candidate.
Mar. 27, 1991 Second mail/~file clerk
competition posted.
July 22, 1991 Mail/file clerk vacancy
filled. Katherine Gosse
was unsuccessful
candidate.
The successful candidate in the competition with which we are
concerned was Mr. Shane Burry, who was given notice of the
4
hearings, and who attended on the first day of hearing, but did not
attend on the second day.
On July 24, 1991, Ms. Gosse filed a grievance, Exhibit 2,
claiming that her "qualifications, ability and seniority were not
given fair and unbiased consideration and~that [she] was not the
successful applicant in [the noted competition].''~ She requested
that she: "... be awarded the' competition with full seniority, pay
& vacation benefits and pension credits ~retroactive to July 12,
1991 and the current bank rate of interest paid on all monies
owing."
On August 8, 1991, Ms. Gosse filed a grievance, Exhibit 1,
grieving that~ she had: "been unjustly dismissed." The settlement
desired was: "That I be reinstated with full retroactive pay,
seniority, vacation and benefits and pension credits and the
current bank rate of interest paid on all monies owing."
Objectiong to A~bitra~lity
After the.opening statements of counsel for the parties,
counsel for the Employer raised two preliminary objections:
i. That if the Board found that Ms. Gosse had been properly
appointed to the unclassified service, then her comPetition
grievance was not arbitrable.
5
That the non-renewal of a contract of a member of the
unclassified service was also not arbitrable.
The Termination GrievanGe
In the case before us, it was submitted that Ms. Gosse·'s
contract was Germinated because the position that she had been
assigned to as an unclassified contract employee had been filled as
a classified position. It was submitted that it was understood
that she was hired to fill the unclassified position only until it
was filled as a classified position. It was further submitted that
the termination of the contract was not in the nature of a
disciplinary measure, and there was no suggestion that the
termination was for cause.
Counsel for the Employer proposed to call evidence with
resPect to the preliminary objections in order to clarify the
circumstances surrounding the hiring of the Grievor; that her
appointment to the unclassified service was proper; and that her
termination took place sglely as a result of the unclassified
position that she occupied on a contract basis being filled through
the competition process on a classified basis.
As counsel for the Union acknowledged that he would ~ot be
arguing that the Grievor had not been properly appointed to the
unclassified service, it is unnecessary to review the evidence
called'by counsel for the Employer in that regard.
6
Evidence was adduced as to whether paragraph (M) of the terms
and conditions of employment (Part V), set out in ail of the
employment contracts, above referred to, had been explained to the
Grievor by Ms. Pasqualina Iapaolo, the Assistant Regional Manager
of the Support & Custody 'Orders Enforcement Branch, in the Hamilton
Re'gional Office of the Employer, who, as part of her
responsibilities, was required to' review contracts with contract
employees prior to their signing them, to .ensure that they
understood their provisions. We are satisfied that Ms. Gosse was
given an opportunity to read over the contracts~ and that she did
.so. Ms. Iapaolo testified that she had explained the terms and
conditions to Ms. Gosse, who 'denied this assertion. We conclude
that nothing turns on which version of what took place is accepted.
We do not regard Ms. Gosse as having been mislead as to the nature
of the obligation she was undertaking, and the provisions of
paragraph (M) are straightforward. We also accept that it was the
practice of the Employer, when purporting to rely upon the said
provision, to give two weeks' notice to' affected employees, which
was also its intention in this case when notice of termination
(Exhibit 11) was given to Ms. Gosse.
Counsel. for the Employer also relied on art. 3.12 of the
collective agreement:
Employment may be terminated by the Employer at any time
with one (1) week's notice, or pay in lieu thereof.
7
Counsel argued that that is what was done in this case, except that
the Grievor was 9iven two weeks' notice with pay.
counsel for the Employer also.relied on the provisions of s.9
of the Publ%c,Servic~ Act, R.S.O. 1980 c. 418, which provides:
A person who is appointed to a position in the public
service for a specified period ceases to be a public
servant at the expiration of that period.
Relying on the provisions of paragraph (M) of the terms and
conditions of employment and article 3.12 of the collective
agreement, it was submitted that the Grievor had no status to
grieve the termination of her contract.
Reference was made to R.G. COrey, 377/86 (Gandz). In that
ease, the Board found' that the grievor was an unclassified
Correctional Officer 1, and that he had been appointed as a public
servant in the unclassified service under section 8 of the Public
Service~Act for the period October 16, 1985 to APril 15, 1986;
that he ceased to be a public servant at the expiry of his contract
on April .15, 1986; and that he had been'notified in writing by the
employer on April 7, !986 that his'contrac~ would not be renewed
when it expired. Relying on the distinction'made between non-
renewal and termination in Cascag%ette, 1246/85, Humeniu~, 614/84,
· and Skalesky, 429/81, the Board stated, at p.3, that 'iThey set up
a simple matrix," which was set out at p.4:
REASONS FOR SEVERANCE
FORM OF ' Performance- No__~t
SEVERANCE OF related Performance-
EMPLOYMENT related
Termination Grievable Not Grievable
during contract
Non-renewal at Not 'Grievable Not Grievable
end of contract
There'was no suggestion, in Core~, that the termination of the
contract during its operation was performance related, and ther'e
was no basis, for that termination being grieved in accordance with
the j~risprudenee of the Board as there set out.
We are satisfied, from the evidence in the case before us,
that there was no further need for the Grievor's services as a
Mail/file Clerk after the appointment of Mr. BUrry to the position,
which had been converted from an unclassified to a classified one.·
This was not a ease where just cause had to be shown,.as would be
the case if the termination was performance related. The need for
an incumbent~ in the unc~lassified position ended when it was
converted to a classified one.
Reference was also,made to Singh, 333/91 (DiSsanayake), where
the grievor, a member of the unclassified service, ~laimed that he
had been dismissed without just cause and sought reinstatement with
full redress. The employer, in that case, as does the Employer.in
the case before us, took the position that the grievor was not~
dismissed at all, and that what occurred was a decision by the
employer not to' renew his fixed-term contract.
At p. 15 of the same case, the Board noted the fact that it
was "faced with the new fourth category of unclassified employees
included in subsection (d) of section 6(1) [of the Regulations to
the Public Serv~c9 Act]." The Board added, at pp. 15-16, that an
appointment~to the unclassified service need only be made "pursuant
to and in compliance with, section 8 of the Public Service Act. As
we have noted, there was no attempt to demonstrate that ~the Grievor
was appointed otherwise than as an unclassified employee. The
Board (at p. 18) concluded that it had no jurisdiction to deal with
the grievance once it was ascertained that the grievor~ ceased to be
a public servant. Although,· in that case, this occurred on "the
expiry of his contract ... ," the same result would apply in the
case before us as the contract expired under the terms of paragraph
(M) or under article 3.12 of the collective agreement. Termination
under the latter article is to be distinguished from a termination
for cause.
The situation before us is analogous·to a case, at common law~
or .under the Employment Standards Act, where a contract of
employment can be terminated subject to compliance with·specified
notice.
Referrence was also made t0 Porter 428/90·etc. (Brandt), to
the same~effect, and also with respect to the right to pursue a
competition grievance. There, the Board concluded, at p.17:
· /
In summary, we find that the Grievor was properly
appointed in accordance with section 8 of the Public
Service AGt and O.Reg. 129/89. Therefore, she has no
status to pursue the competition grievance. Nor, in'the
absence of any claim that the non-renewal of' her
contract, is a disguised dismissal for culpable conduct,
does she have any status to pursue the dismissal
grievance.
Although, on the facts of the Porter case, the decision
related to a contract that had expired by effluxion of time, we
regard the principle to be the same in the case before us: that
jurisdiction in the case of a grievance by an unclassified employee
relating to the termination of his contract, whether by effluxion
of time, or notice, is dependent on a finding that what'actually
took place was a "disguised dismissal for culpable conduct."
On the facts of the case before us, there is no basis for a
finding other than that the Grievor's contract was terminated
because the Employer had no need for anyone to perform the work
that was now to be performed by the incumbent, Mr. Burry as a
classified employee.
The Competition Grievance
There was a considerable hiatus between the second day of
hearing, July 20, 1992, and 'the reconvening of the final day of
hearing on Novembe~ 3, 1993. During that time, a decision of the
Board in Not,and, 3160/9'2 (Gorsky) was released. That case was
heard on August 27, 1993, and the decision is dated September 21,
1993, and it is On this decision that counsel for the Union relied
as a basis .for th~ Board concluding that it had jurisdiction to
hear the competition grievance. The Norlan~ case dealt with
whether the provisions of article 3.15.1, when considered in the
light of the purpose of that article and in the context of other
articles in the collective agreement, had the effect of changing
the previous jurisprudence of the Board which denied unclassified
employees the right to grieve competition cases. The article
considered in the No~and case is found in.the collective agreement
between the parties from January 1, 1992 to December 31, 1993, and
is found in the same language'in the agreement before us, being
from January 1, 1989 to December 31, 1991. The article is as
follows:
Effective April 1, 1991, where the same work has been
.performed by an employee in the Unclassified Service for
a period of at least two (2) consecutive years, and where
the ministry has determined that there is a continuing
need for that work to be performed on a full-time basis,
the ministry shall establish a position within the
Classified Service to perform that work, and shall post
a vacancy in accordance with Article 4 (Posting and
Filling of Vacancies or New Positioas).
Although counsel for the Employer regarded the decision in
Nor~a~d to be wrong (which decision, coincidentally, was delivered
by the same panel seized of the instant case), his position was
that it was unnecessary for us to reject our earlier decision in
order to find in his favour. We were asked to find that the
Grievor ~had not passed the threshold established in art. 3.15~.1, so
as to make its provisions applicable to the facts of her case.
in Norland, the Board'concluded that if article 3.15.1 did not
apply to th~ facts before it, then, the jurisprudence of the Board,
1'2
which was referred to, indicated that the grievor would'not have
been able to grieve the competition.
Does article 3.1'5.1 apply to the facts of this case? Article
3.15.1 obliges, "the Ministry ... [to] establish a position within
the Classified Service to perform" "the same work [that] has been
performed by an employee in th~ unclassified service for a period
of at least two (2) consecutive years.., where the Ministry has
determined that there is a continuing need for that work to be
performed on a full-time basis .... " The Board can only find that
article 3.15.1 applies to a case before it in accordance with its
express ~terms, but cannot expand the terms to apply to a case
because it may seem reasonable to do so.
Given the specific requirements of the language found in
article 3.15.1, it is not possible for us to ~ay that it applies to
the facts before us. This is because it does not require, the
Employer to post the vacancy in accordance with artiole 4 until the
employee performing "the same work" - the Grievor in this case -
has done so "for a period of at least two (2) consecutive years.
.... " On the facts before us, this was not the case, even if all
of the other conditions for the application of the article have
been met~ If the conditions for the application of art. 3.15.1 are
to be expanded, this wil. 1 have to be done'by agreement of the
parties.
13
Decision
Accordingly, and for the above reasons, we have no
jurisdiction to adjudicate the grievances, and they are not
arbitrable,
Dated at Toronto this 21sc day of December, 1993.
M. Gorsky - Vice Chairperson
.-~-~~~' ~ ,~~/ Addendum
· attached.
:~. Lyons ~ Mem~r
'Toole - Member
RE: 1679/91, 1741/91
OOSSE (OPS~3 & Ministry of the Attorney General)
Although I concur with the decision in this matter, two issues that arose
during the hearing concern me..
Firstly, it seems clear, that the reason the' parties negotiated Article
3.15.1 was to end a practice whereby an pe[son would be appointed to the
Unclassified Service and then perform the same work for many years under a
series of contracts. If there was a continuing need for the work, the
parties wanted to ensure that the employee performing the work received the
additional benefits available to Classified employees.
However, the possibility for abuse has not been ccmpletely eliminated. For
example, it is possible for the ~nployer to appoint a series of people to
the Unclassified Service under a series of contracts over many years to
perform work for which there is a continuing need, providing no employee
performs the work for at least two consecutive years.. It seems to me that
if the same work has been performed for a period of at least two .years,
whether~ by one person or a series of people in the Unclassified Service,
and it has been determined that there is a continuing need for that work to
be performed, then a position in the Classified Service ought to be
created.
Secondly, I am concerned about the fact that Ms. Beal's cC~ments about the
Grievor during the c<X~Petition process effectively served to veto the
Grievor's appointment to the Classified Service.
Following the interviews, the Grievor was ranked first by every member 'of
the selection panel. Her overall marks were more than 10~ greater than the
second ranked candidate, Mr. Burry, who was an external candidate with no
experience in the position. As w~tl, the Grievor's contract was renewed
four times during her sixteen months of employment, which would indicate
that she was performing her work ' satisfactorily. Yet, despite the
objective evidence it had that the Grievor had superior qualifications,
ability and experience, the selection panel chose to deny the Grievor the
position based on Ms. Beal's co~mentso In effect, Ms. Beal was able to
Veto the Grievor ' s selection as the successful candidate in the
ccmpetition.
Had we found that the Grievor had the right to grieve the results of the
ccmpetition, I believe we would also have found that the Grievor should
have ~been appointed to the position.
Dated,~at Toronto this 30th day of November, 1993.