HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-1158.Letourneau.95-08-17
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ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
~;;: ;;a;~ J CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
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1111 GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
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SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD -0 DES GRIEFS
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180 DUNDAS STREET \ll{EST SUITE'2100. TORONTO. ONTARIO, M5G lZ8 TELEPHONE/TELEPHONE (416) 326-1388
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 2100; TORONTO (ONTARIO) M5G lZ8 FAqSIMILE /TELECOPIE (416) 326-1396
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GSB # 11-58/92
OPSEU # 92F050
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before -
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT' BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Letourneau)
Grievor
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The Crown in Right of ontario
(Ministry of Health)
~ Employer
BEFORE S stewart Vice-Chairperson
FOR THE M. Doyle /
GRIEVOR Counsel
Ryder, Wright, Blair & Doyle
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE D Costen
EMPLOYER Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Management Board Secretariat
HEARING r April 20, 1995
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DECISION
The grievance before me is dated April 21, 1989 and is filed
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on behalf of Mr. L.\ Letourneau The grievance claims that Mr.
Letourneau's position is improperly classified as Ambulancei
Officer 2 and the relief sought in the grievance includes a claim
for retroactive pay.
Counsel were able to agree to all of ~he relevant facts,
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which were described to me as follows.
1 In 1986 Mr Letourneau began work as a Go Temp
at Windsor Centre Ambulance Communications
Centre (Windsor CACC) He began work as an
ambulance dispatcher, classified as Radio
Operator 2
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2 In 1986, other employees in the Radio Operator
2 classification, throughout the province, 'filed
classification grievances
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3. In January, 1987, nine full-time classified
employees working as ambulance dispatchers at
the Windsor CACC filed classification grievances
Seven of these employees were in the R02
classification and two were in the R03
classification, the latter two employees having
( additional supervisory duties.
4 On January 25, 1988, Mr. Letourneau was appointed
to the classified service He continued to work
in the R02 classification at the Windsor CACC
5. From that time he performed identical duties to
the seven classified grievors who had grieved,
often working side by side with them
6. At that time Mr Letourneau was aware of the fact
that classification grievances had been filed by
R02s It was his understanding that he would be
part of any eventual settlement or reclassification
so he did not grieve There was no assertion of
any kind of ~epresentation to this effect made by a
member of management to Mr Letourneau.
7. Immediate supervision was provided to the grievor
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by Mr. D Dunbar and Mr R Kennedy These persons
are members of the bargaining unit and are the two
persons In the, R03 classification referred to above
8. Mr. Letourneau filed a classification gri.evance on
April 21, 1989 when he was advised that it may be
necessary for him to do so in order for him to be "part
of" the larger grievance or set of grievances
9 In February of 1992, Mr Letourneau as well as other
persons in his classification were advised of a new
rate which had been established pursuant to an award
of a board of arbitration chaired by Mr B Keller
10 Mr Letourneau recei~ed a letter dated July 16,
1992 from Personnel Department advising that .the
effective date of the implementation of the salary
increase is August 13, 1990 and that issues relating
to outstanding grievances dealing with retroactivity
prior to August 13, 1990 werelstill unresolved and
would be dealt with at a future date.
11- There was no' change to the duties of ambulance
dispatchers in August of 1990 or in July of 1992.-
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12. In November, 1992, each grievor was offered payment
for retroactivity to 20 days prior to filing of
his or her own grievance
13 All of the other grievors in windsor accepted that
offer of retroactivity 20 days prior to the filing
of their individual grievances. Mr Letourneau
has not accepted that offer and claims entitlement
to retroactivity extending back to January 25, 1988.
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14. There were five other grievors, employed elsewhere
in the province, who filed grievances at the same time
or after Mr. Letourneau filed his grievance These
other grievors have accepted retroactivity limited
to 20 days prior to the date of their grievances.
There are two bases upon which the Employer asserts that the
grievor's claim to retroactivity beyond twenty days prior to the
filing of the grievance ought to be dismissed The Employer
relies on what is described in smith, 237/81, (Roberts) as the
"usual rule" that retroactivity is limited to the ,period
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prescribed by the Collective Agreement within which ~t was
permissible for the grievor to file his grievance. The Employer
also relies on the provisions of the August 1, 1993 local
agreement made pursuant to the Social Contract Act, for the
proposition that the grievance has b~en withdrawn
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While an issue of whether a grievance has been withdrawn is
the issue that would normally be dealt with at the outset of a
decision, the circumstances here are somewhat unusual As I
understand the Employer's position, it remains prepared to pay
the grievor retroactivity to twenty days prior to the filing of
his grievance, as it has in the case of all .other grievors,
notwithstanding its position that the grievance is withdrawn I
will therefore deal first with the i,.ssue of whether the "usual
rule" applies, that is, whether retroactivity is properly limited
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to twenty days prior to the date of t;he filing of the griev~nce.
Ms. Doyle submitted that in simila~ circumstances the Board
has ruled that retroactivity ought to extend beyond twenty days
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prior to the filing of the grievance She referred me to
Mini~trv of Transportation and OPSEU (Hillmahl 2007/89 (Kaplan),
where at pages 11-13, the Board states as follows.
In Smith 237/81 (Roberts), the Board said "The usual rule
is that, barring the existence of circumstances which would
make it inequitable for the Ministry to rely upon it,
retroactivity will be limited to the period of time within
which it was permissable for the grievor to file his \
grievance" (at 6). We are of the view that there are
circumstances in this case which would make it inequitable
to limit retroactivity to twenty days In reaching this
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decision we do not find it necessary to deal directly with
whether or not the twenty-day rule has any application to
cl~ssification cases. We reach this result based on our
finding that this is one case where it would be equitable
to extend the period of retroactivity beyond the twenty-day
period generally awarded in classification cases
We find support for this result based in the line of cases
which have held that where the employer has been put on
notice of the complaint prior to an actual grievance being
filed, the period of retroactivity may be extended where
circumstances warrant. In this case, the employer was put
on notice by the filing of the Truchon grievances.
Moreover, in this case, all of the employees eventually
subject to reclassification work for the same Ministry
In addition, the Truchon grievors, and the grievor in
the instant case, work in the same District. It can
hardly be said that the Ministry was taken unaware by the
instant grievance It knew that the classifications of
Senior Construction Technicians in the northern region
had been brought into issue, and it knew that should those
classifications be found wanting that every Senior
Construction Technician would have to be reclassified. It
would defy logic, commonsense and fairness to deny the
grievance in this case for to do so would mean that some
Senior Construct~on Technicians would receive
reclassification, and presuI.Ilably better compensation, for
their work, while their fellow employees, performing
exactly the same duties at exactly the same time would
not receive reclassification and compensation for the
per10d in question
Ms. Doyle argued that the facts of the case before me cannot be
distinguished in principle from the facts in Hillman
Accordingly; it was argued, the same result ought to follow and
retroactivity extend beyond twenty days prior to the filing of
Mr. Letourneau's grievance
Mr Costen referred me to Ministrv of Community and Social
Services and Ministry of Correcti~nal Services and OPSEU
(Jansson) 1888/89, (Gorsky) in which it was determined in
relation to certain classification grievances that retroactivity
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would not extend beyond 20 days prior to the filing of a
grievance. In that case counsel for the Employer had urged the
Board to conclude tnat the decision in Hillman was manifestly
incorrect However, the Board distinguished Hillman from the
case before it and therefore found it unnecessary to deal with
that issue. The basis for distinction is s~t out at page 35 as
follows:
On the facts of the cases before us we do not have
such evidence as has been acted upon where there was
an 'equity in favour of a grievor to depart from the
twenty-day rule T~at is, we h~ve neither the kind
of evidence as was relied upon in the Hillman case:
(1) relating to the duties and responsibilities
carried out by the grievors whose cases they were)
relying upon. (2) That the Grievors in the cases
before us were working, as was the grievor in the
Hillman case, side by side with the grievors whose
cases he was relying upon (3) That the employers
were put on notice in the manner as was referred to
in the Hillman case Nor do we have the kind of
intervention by an employer as would now raise an
estoppel permitting us to depart from the twenty-day
rule.
The decision goes on to conclude as follows.
It is not difficult to see how employees, who
regard themselves as having performed exactly
the same kind of work as the other employees
who were successful in obtaining retroactivity
to an earlier period, would regard the result
as manife~tly unfair. However, on the facts
before us, and, given the position taken by
the Employer, we are unable to find an equity
in favour of the Grievors that would permit a
departure from the twenty-day rule Accordingly,
the two grievances before us must be dismissed.,
An application for judicial review of the Board's decision
in Jansson was considered by the Divisional Court in a decision
dated April 19,1994 At pp 2-3, Mr Justice Adams writes as
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follows:
We are ali of the view that the Grievance Settlement
Board did not err, nor did it decline jurisdiction
in its sensitive consideration of the retroactivity I
issue, having regard to the provisions of the
collective agreement and labour ~elations policy.
with respect to the l~tter issue, we note that s 19
OL the statute was nQtenacted in a labour relations
vacuum, as s 18 clearly indicates As for the --
former issue, the panel of the Grievance Settlement
Board, in these circumstances, reasonably approached
the Board's earlier jurisprudence and this court
ought to defer to such expert decision-making
Generally, we find no fettering of jurisdiction
within the meaning of the cases on which the applicant
relies The Board, thoughtfully and from a reasonable
labour relations point of view, applied its mind to
the issues before it in a manner that cannot be
characterized as declining jurisdiction, l)aving regard
to the inherent procedural and labour relations realitie~ i
of the contest before it. The submissions of union
counsel, before this court, appeared to fly in the
face of those realities For example, the argument that
the re-classification in 1987/88 alone amounted to an
admission by the employer of earlier job parity, taken to
its logical conclusion, could mean any re-classification
in relation to wage harmonization, amounts to an admission
that such an adjustment should be made retroactive to the
advent of all affected jobs In our view, the Board dealt
with all of the submissions before it with a proper regard
for its statutory mandate and the labour relations context
in which that mandate must be interpreted. The Board
neither erred in principle, nor exceeded its jurisdiction
in making the decision that it did.
Subsequent to the hearing before me, a decision of
this Board dated June 5, 1995, Ministrv of Transportation &
OPSEU (Kay et al), 93/88 etc (Barrett), WqS issued Mr Costen
brought this decision to my attention by letter dated June 6,
1995 In that decision, at p 4, the Board refers to the second
paragraph of the Divisional Court decision, reproduced supra, in
relation to the "logical conclusion" of the Union's po~ition in
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the Icase before it and states that
Although the Jansson panel had distinguished Hillman ,
rather than finding it manifestly wrong, it appears that
the Divisional Court went further and explicitly rejected
the Union argument which was successful in Hillman
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The Board unanimously dismissed the grievances before it, on the
) basis that the rationale for the Union's success in Hillman had
been explicitly rejected by the Court in Jansson Mr. Costen
urged me to corne to the same conclusion, e~ph9sizing the need to
ensure consi~tency on this issue
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Ms Doyle responded by letter dated July 11, 1995, in which
she emphasized that the decision in Jansson had distinguished
Hillman and that the decision in Jansson had been upheld by the
Divisional Court Ms Doyle characterized the comments of the
~ourt relied on in Kay as obiter and submitted that the decision
in Hillman remains "good law" at the Grievance Settlement Board.
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Accepting that the Union is correct in its submission that
the facts before me are indistinguishable in principle from the
facts in Hillman, the real issue is whether Hillman, rather than
Kav, ought to be followed As Mr Costen emphasized, consistency
is a significant matter in relation to decisions of this Bdard.
The parties need to know with. sbme certainty how to conduct their
affairs The decision in Kay was issued subsequent to the
decision in Hillman The decision in Kay is unanimous and
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departed from Hillman on the basis of a decision o~ the
Divisionai Court which dealt with the issue of retroactivity in ;
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the context of a classification grievance Ms Doyle may be
correct in her characterization of the comments of the Divisional
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Co~rt relied on in Kay as obiter Notwithstanding this matter,
and while the Court clearly does not specifically address, the
thorough and detail,ed reasoning in Hillman, the Union did not
take issue with the ,rationale of the Kay decision in applying the
comments of the Court Considering the importance of consistency
it is my view that the Board's most recent, unananimous decision
in Kay ought to be followed A9cordingly, I do not accept the
Union's position that retroactivity ought to extend beyond twenty
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days prior to Mr Letourneau filing his grievance Given that
the Employer is prepared to pay Mr Letourneau on this basis,
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which I have found to be the extent of its liability, there is no
need to address the Employer's alternative submission in relation
to the effect of the local agreement. I retain jurisdiction to
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deal with any difficulties that the parties may experience in
calculating monies owed to Mr. Letou.rneau or otherwise in
implementing this award
DATED at Toronto, this 17 day of August , 1995.
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s L stewart - Vice-Chair
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